TOI-5205b: A Short-period Jovian Planet Transiting a Mid-M Dwarf

Kanodia, Shubham; Mahadevan, Suvrath; Libby-Roberts, Jessica; Stefansson, Gudmundur; Canas, Caleb I.; Piette, Anjali A. A.; Boss, Alan; Teske, Johanna; Chambers, John; Zeimann, Greg; Monson, Andrew; Robertson, Paul; Ninan, Joe P.; Lin, Andrea S. J.; Bender, Chad F.; Cochran, William D.; Diddams, Scott A.; Gupta, Arvind F.; Halverson, Samuel; Hawley, Suzanne; Kobulnicky, Henry A.; Metcalf, Andrew J.; Parker, Brock A.; Powers, Luke; Ramsey, Lawrence W.; Roy, Arpita; Schwab, Christian; Swaby, Tera N.; Terrien, Ryan C.; Wisniewski, John
2023
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
DOI
10.3847/1538-3881/acabce
We present the discovery of TOI-5205b, a transiting Jovian planet orbiting a solar metallicity M4V star, which was discovered using Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite photometry and then confirmed using a combination of precise radial velocities, ground-based photometry, spectra, and speckle imaging. TOI-5205b has one of the highest mass ratios for M-dwarf planets, with a mass ratio of almost 0.3%, as it orbits a host star that is just 0.392 +/- 0.015 M (circle dot). Its planetary radius is 1.03 +/- 0.03 R (J), while the mass is 1.08 +/- 0.06 M (J). Additionally, the large size of the planet orbiting a small star results in a transit depth of similar to 7%, making it one of the deepest transits of a confirmed exoplanet orbiting a main-sequence star. The large transit depth makes TOI-5205b a compelling target to probe its atmospheric properties, as a means of tracing the potential formation pathways. While there have been radial-velocity-only discoveries of giant planets around mid-M dwarfs, this is the first transiting Jupiter with a mass measurement discovered around such a low-mass host star. The high mass of TOI-5205b stretches conventional theories of planet formation and disk scaling relations that cannot easily recreate the conditions required to form such planets.