The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2022)

A 38 Million Year Old Neptune-sized Planet in the Kepler Field

  • L. G. Bouma,
  • J. L. Curtis,
  • K. Masuda,
  • L. A. Hillenbrand,
  • G. Stefansson,
  • H. Isaacson,
  • N. Narita,
  • A. Fukui,
  • M. Ikoma,
  • M. Tamura,
  • A. L. Kraus,
  • E. Furlan,
  • C. L. Gnilka,
  • K. V. Lester,
  • S. B. Howell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac4966
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 163, no. 3
p. 121

Abstract

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Kepler 1627A is a G8V star previously known to host a 3.8 R _⊕ planet on a 7.2 day orbit. The star was observed by the Kepler space telescope because it is nearby ( d = 329 pc) and it resembles the Sun. Here, we show using Gaia kinematics, TESS stellar rotation periods, and spectroscopic lithium abundances that Kepler 1627 is a member of the ${38}_{-5}^{+6}$ Myr old δ Lyr cluster. To our knowledge, this makes Kepler 1627Ab the youngest planet with a precise age yet found by the prime Kepler mission. The Kepler photometry shows two peculiarities: the average transit profile is asymmetric, and the individual transit times might be correlated with the local light-curve slope. We discuss possible explanations for each anomaly. More importantly, the δ Lyr cluster is one of ∼10 ^3 coeval groups whose properties have been clarified by Gaia. Many other exoplanet hosts are candidate members of these clusters; their ages can be verified with the trifecta of Gaia, TESS, and ground-based spectroscopy.

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