Discovery of a transiting hot water-world candidate orbiting Ross 176 with TESS and CARMENES
S. Gerald\'ia-Gonz\'alez, J. Orell-Miquel, E. Pall\'e, F. Murgas, G. Lacedelli, V. J. S. B\'ejar, J. A. Caballero, C. Duque-Arribas, J. Lillo-Box, D. Montes, G. Morello, E. Nagel, A. Schweitzer, H. M. Tabernero, Y. Calatayud-Borras, C. Cifuentes, G. Fern\'andez-Rodr\'iguez

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of a water-world candidate planet orbiting Ross 176, using combined TESS and CARMENES data, highlighting the effectiveness of dual space-ground detection methods.
Contribution
First detection of a water-world candidate around Ross 176 using combined TESS and CARMENES data with advanced Gaussian Process analysis.
Findings
Ross 176b has a radius of 1.84 R⊕ and a mass of 4.57 M⊕.
The planet orbits with a period of about 5 days and an equilibrium temperature of 682K.
The planet's density suggests a water-rich composition.
Abstract
The case of Ross 176 is a late K-type star that hosts a promising water-world candidate planet. The star has a radius of =0.5690.020 and a mass of = 0.577 0.024 . We constrained the planetary mass using spectroscopic data from CARMENES, an instrument that has already played a major role in confirming the planetary nature of the transit signal detected by TESS. We used Gaussian Processes (GP) to improve the analysis because the host star has a relatively strong activity that affects the radial velocity dataset. In addition, we applied a GP to the TESS light curves to reduce the correlated noise in the detrended dataset. The stellar activity indicators show a strong signal that is related to the stellar rotation period of 32 days. This stellar activity signal was also confirmed on the TESS light curves. Ross 176b is an inner hot…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
