Mass determination of the ultra-short-period planet LHS 3844 b. First K-band radial velocity measurements with CRIRES+
E. Nagel, J. K\"ohler, M. Zechmeister, A. D. Rains, U. Seemann, A. Hatzes, A. Reiners, N. Piskunov, L. Boldt-Christmas, P. Bristow, P. Chaturvedi, D. Cont, S. Czesla, R. J. Dorn, E. Guenther, Y. Jung, O. Kochukhov, F. Lesjak, F. Lucertini, T. Marquart, L. Nortmann, M. Rengel

TL;DR
This study reports the first mass measurement of the ultra-short-period planet LHS 3844 b using CRIRES+ K-band radial velocity data, confirming its rocky nature and highlighting its potential for atmospheric and surface characterization with JWST.
Contribution
First K-band RV measurements with CRIRES+ for an ultra-short-period planet, demonstrating the capability to determine masses of super-Earths around late M dwarfs.
Findings
Detected planetary mass of 2.37 Earth masses with RV semi-amplitude of 6.95 m/s.
Confirmed the planet's predominantly rocky composition with a density of 6.15 g/cm^3.
Identified a tentative additional planetary signal at ~6.88 days.
Abstract
We present the first planet mass measurement obtained with CRIRES+ radial velocity (RV) observations using the K-band gas cell. Our target, LHS 3844 b (TOI-136), is a transiting super-Earth with radius and an orbital period of d, placing it in the class of ultra-short-period (USP) planets. The host star LHS 3844 is an old (Gyr), slowly rotating (d) M5.0 dwarf with at a distance of 15pc (V=15.2mag, K=9.2mag). Combining our CRIRES+ RVs with archival ESPRESSO spectra, and confirming the signal in each dataset independently, we detected periodic RV variations with a semi-amplitude m/s, implying a planetary mass of and a bulk density of $\rho_b =…
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