The GAPS programme at TNG LXIV: An inner eccentric sub-Neptune and an outer sub-Neptune-mass candidate around BD+00 444 (TOI-2443)
L. Naponiello, A. S. Bonomo, L. Mancini, M.L. Steinmeyer, K. Biazzo,, D. Polychroni, C. Dorn, D. Turrini, A. F. Lanza, A. Sozzetti, S. Desidera, M., Damasso, K. A. Collins, I. Carleo, K. I. Collins, S. Colombo, M. C. D'Arpa,, X. Dumusque, M. Gonzalez, G. Guilluy, V. Lorenzi

TL;DR
This study characterizes a sub-Neptune exoplanet around BD+00 444, revealing its physical properties, eccentric orbit, and potential habitability zone candidate, using combined spectroscopic and photometric data.
Contribution
First detailed characterization of the planetary system around BD+00 444, including mass, radius, eccentricity, and potential habitability of the candidate planet.
Findings
BD+00 444 b is a low-density, eccentric sub-Neptune with a 15.67-day orbit.
Detection of a second sub-Neptune-mass candidate in the habitable zone.
The planet's properties make it suitable for atmospheric follow-up with JWST.
Abstract
We examined in depth the star BD+00 444 (GJ 105.5, TOI-2443; V = 9.5 mag; d = 23.9 pc), with the aim of characterizing and confirming the planetary nature of its small companion, the planet candidate TOI-2443.01, which was discovered by TESS. We monitored BD+00 444 with the HARPS-N spectrograph for 1.5 years to search for planet-induced radial-velocity (RV) variations, and then analyzed the RV measurements jointly with TESS and ground-based photometry. We determined that the host is a quiet K5 V, and we revealed that the sub-Neptune BD+00 444 b has a radius of , a mass of and, consequently, a rather low-density value of g cm-3, which makes it compatible with both an Earth-like rocky interior with a thin H-He atmosphere and a half-rocky, half-water composition with a small amount of H-He. Having an orbital…
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