Abstract |
The TESS mission detected a companion orbiting TIC 71268730, categorized it as a planet candidate, and designated the system TOI-5375. Our follow-up analysis using radial velocity data from the Habitable-zone Planet Finder (HPF), photometric data from Red Buttes Observatory (RBO), and speckle imaging with NN-EXPLORE Exoplanet Stellar Speckle Imager (NESSI) determined that the companion is a very low mass star (VLMS) near the hydrogen-burning mass limit with a mass of 0.080$\pm{0.002} M_{\Sun}$ ($83.81\pm{2.10} M_{J}$), a radius of 0.1114$^{+0.0048}_{-0.0050} R_{\Sun}$ (1.0841$^{0.0467}_{0.0487} R_{J}$), and brightness temperature of $2600\pm{70}$ K. This object orbits with a period of 1.721553$\pm{0.000001}$ days around an early M dwarf star ($0.62\pm{0.016}M_{\Sun}$). TESS photometry shows regular variations in the host star's TESS light curve, which we interpreted as activity-induced variation of $\sim$2\%, and used this variability to measure the host star's stellar rotation period of 1.9716$^{+0.0080}_{-0.0083}$ days. The TOI-5375 system provides tight constraints on stellar models of low-mass stars at the hydrogen-burning limit and adds to the population in this important region. |
Authors |
Mika Lambert , Chad F. Bender , Shubham Kanodia , Caleb I. Cañas , Andrew Monson , Guđmundur Stefánsson , William D. Cochran , Mark E. Everett , Arvind F. Gupta , Fred Hearty  , Henry A. Kobulnicky  , Jessica E. Libby-Roberts , Andrea S. J. Lin , Suvrath Mahadevan , Joe P. Ninan , Brock A. Parker  , Paul Robertson , Christian Schwab , Ryan C. Terrien
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