New constraints on the planetary system around the young active star AU Mic: Two transiting warm Neptunes near mean-motion resonance

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Abstract

AU Microscopii (AU Mic) is a young, active star whose transiting planet was recently detected. Here, we report our analysis of its TESS light curve, where we modeled the BY Draconis type quasi-periodic rotational modulation by starspots simultaneously to the flaring activity and planetary transits. We measured a flare occurrence rate in AU Mic of 6.35 flares per day for flares with amplitudes in the range of 0.06% < fmax< 1.5% of the star flux. We employed a Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo analysis to model the five transits of AU Mic b observed by TESS, improving the constraints on the planetary parameters. The measured planet-to-star effective radius ratio of RpR*= 0.0496 + 0.0007 implies a physical radius of 4.07 +; 0.17 R*and a planet density of 1.4 +0.4 g cm-3, confirming that AU Mic b is a Neptune-size moderately inflated planet. While a single feature possibly due to a second planet was previously reported in the former TESS data, we report the detection of two additional transit-like events in the new TESS observations of July 2020. This represents substantial evidence for a second planet (AU Mic c) in the system. We analyzed its three available transits and obtained an orbital period of 18.859019 + 0.000016 d and a planetary radius of 3.24 + 0.16 R+, which defines AU Mic c as a warm Neptune-size planet with an expected mass in the range of 2.2 M+< Mc< 25.0 M+, estimated from the population of exoplanets of similar sizes. The two planets in the AU Mic system are in near 9:4 mean-motion resonance. We show that this configuration is dynamically stable and should produce transit-timing variations (TTV). Our non-detection of significant TTV in AU Mic b suggests an upper limit for the mass of AU Mic c of <7 Mo, indicating that this planet is also likely to be inflated. As a young multi-planet system with at least two transiting planets, AU Mic becomes a key system for the study of atmospheres of infant planets and of planet-planet and planet-disk dynamics at the early stages of planetary evolution.

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Martioli, E., He&acute;brard, G., Correia, A. C. M., Laskar, J., & Lecavelier Des Etangs, A. (2021). New constraints on the planetary system around the young active star AU Mic: Two transiting warm Neptunes near mean-motion resonance. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 649. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202040235

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