The Hot Neptune Initiative (HONEI) II. TOI-5795 b: A hot super-Neptune orbiting a metal-poor star
F. Manni, L. Naponiello, L. Mancini, S. Vissapragada, K. Biazzo, A. S. Bonomo, D. Polychroni, D. Turrini, D. Locci, A. Maggio, V. D Orazi, M. Damasso, C. Briceno, D. R. Ciardi, C. A. Clark, K. A. Collins, D. W. Latham, N. Law, M. Lopez-Morales, M. B. Lund, L. Malavolta

TL;DR
This paper confirms and characterizes TOI-5795 b, a hot super-Neptune orbiting a metal-poor star, providing insights into its properties and challenging existing planet formation models.
Contribution
It reports the discovery and detailed characterization of a hot super-Neptune around a metal-poor star, and explores its formation history through simulations.
Findings
The planet has a mass of approximately 24 Earth masses and a radius of about 5.6 Earth radii.
It orbits its star every 6.14 days with an eccentricity close to zero.
Formation simulations suggest post-formation dynamical events influenced its current state.
Abstract
The formation of Neptune planets with orbital periods less than 10\,days remains uncertain. They might have developed similarly to longer-period counterparts, emerged from rare collisions between smaller planets, or could be the remnant cores of stripped giant planets. Characterizing a large number of them is important to advance our understanding of how they form and evolve. We aimed at confirming the planetary nature and characterizing the properties of a close-in Neptune-type transiting exoplanet candidate revealed by TESS around the star TOI-5795 (V = 10.7 mag), 162 pc away from the Sun. We monitored TOI-5795 with the HARPS spectrograph for two months to quantify periodic variations in radial velocity (RV) to estimate the mass of the smaller companion. We combined these RV and TESS photometry. High-angular-resolution speckle and adaptive optics imaging excluded contamination from…
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