Super-Earth masses and stellar abundances from NIRPS reveal tentative evidence for water-rich formation around M dwarfs
Drew Weisserman, Nicole Gromek, Ryan Cloutier, Komal Bali, Charles Cadieux, Mykhaylo Plotnykov, Alexandrine L'Heureux, Avidaan Srivastava, Andres Carmona, Yolanda G. C. Frensch, \'Etienne Artigau, Fr\'ed\'erique Baron, Susana C. C. Barros, Bj\"orn Benneke, Xavier Bonfils

TL;DR
This study uses NIRPS spectroscopic data to compare super-Earth planetary core mass fractions with stellar abundances, revealing potential interior water content around M dwarf planets.
Contribution
First to measure and compare super-Earth CMFs and stellar abundances around M dwarfs, suggesting water-rich formation processes.
Findings
Planet CMFs are smaller than predicted from stellar abundances.
Discrepancy indicates significant interior water reservoirs.
Planets likely have about 1% interior water mass fraction.
Abstract
Tracing the compositional link between terrestrial super-Earths and their host stars provides clues to their dominant formation pathway. By constraining the stellar abundances of refractory elements, we can predict the core mass fractions (CMFs) of their super-Earths. The level of agreement between this prediction and the planetary CMF derived from their masses and radii can reveal past formation processes, like mantle stripping and water-rich formation plus sequestration in the planet's core. Here, we present the first results from the Near Infrared Planet Searcher (NIRPS) GTO CMF subprogram: an intensive radial velocity campaign to refine masses and compute host stellar abundances of three hot super- Earths around M dwarfs (GJ 1132 b, GJ 1252 b, and LTT 3780 b), calculating masses of , , and respectively. We measure…
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