A giant planet transiting a 3-Myr protostar with a misaligned disk
Madyson G. Barber, Andrew W. Mann, Andrew Vanderburg, Daniel, Krolikowski, Adam Kraus, Megan Ansdell, Logan Pearce, Gregory N. Mace, Sean, M. Andrews, Andrew W. Boyle, Karen A. Collins, Matthew De Furio, Diana, Dragomir, Catherine Espaillat, Adina D. Feinstein, Matthew Fields

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a transiting planet around a 3-million-year-old star with a misaligned disk, offering insights into early planetary formation and disk-planet interactions.
Contribution
First detection of a transiting planet around a very young star with a misaligned protoplanetary disk, revealing early planetary system configurations.
Findings
Planet has an 8.83-day orbit and a radius close to Jupiter's.
System components are mostly aligned except the outer disk.
Provides a rare glimpse into early sub-Neptune formation.
Abstract
Astronomers have found more than a dozen planets transiting 10-40 million year old stars, but even younger transiting planets have remained elusive. A possible reason for the lack of such discoveries is that newly formed planets are not yet in a configuration that would be recognized as a transiting planet or cannot exhibit transits because our view is blocked by a protoplanetary disk. However, we now know that many outer disks are warped; provided the inner disk is depleted, transiting planets may thus be visible. Here we report the observations of the transiting planet IRAS 04125+2902 b orbiting a 3 Myr, 0.7 M, pre-main sequence star in the Taurus Molecular Cloud. IRAS 04125+2902 hosts a nearly face-on (i 30) transitional disk and a wide binary companion. The planet has a period of 8.83 days, a radius of 10.9 R (0.97R), and a 95%-confidence upper…
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