DS Tucanae (HD 222259) is a binary star system 144 light years away in the constellation of Tucana. It has an apparent visual magnitude of 8.5,[8] and is a RS Canum Venaticorum variable.[5] The system is notable for being young as a member of the 45 Myr old Tucana-Horologium moving group[10] and for the primary star hosting the confirmed exoplanet DS Tucanae Ab, discovered by THYME, using TESS.[11][8][12][13]
Binary star system in the constellation of Tucana
DS Tucanae
DSTucanae imaged with the NTT. DSTucanaeA is on the right and DSTucanaeB is on the left.
DS Tucanae is a visual binary.[4] The binary consists of a G6V primary and a K3V secondary separated by 5″.[15] Based on radial velocity measurements it was suggested that the secondary itself is a binary, but later studies could not find evidence for this claim.[8]
Physical properties
High levels of magnetic activity, a strong 6708Å lithium line, and the position on the color-magnitude diagram, slightly above the main sequence, strongly support a young age of the system.[12] The primary star is emitting a frequent and powerful (up to 5-8×1034 ergs) X-ray flares.[16]
Both components of the binary are main sequence stars. The primary has a mass very similar to the Sun, but slightly cooler and smaller, meaning it is only 72% as luminous as the Sun. The secondary is only 84% as massive as the Sun and only 33% as luminous.
DS Tuc Ab is one of the few transiting planets with an age smaller than 100 Myrs. Other examples are K2-33b, V1298 Tauri b and AU Microscopium b. Of these systems DS Tuc is the brightest and it is a good target for atmospheric characterization with JWST. The planet is a super-Neptune or sub-Saturn.[8] The planet might be an inflated planet with an upper mass limit of 20 MEarth.[12] DS Tuc Ab will be observed by ESA's CHEOPS mission to characterize the planet.[17]
The planet DS Tucanae Ab has a low orbital obliquity (λ = 2.93°+0.88° −0.87° or λ = 12°±13°). This means that the orbital plane of this planet aligns with the stellar equator of the star. This is unusual for a short period planet. Many short period planets show high orbital obliquity, which was taken as a sign of the scattering of the planet into this short period orbit. It can also be interpreted as the formation of a planet in an inner disk with an axial tilt. But these previous measurements of orbital obliquity were made for giant planets around mature stars. DS Tucanae Ab is a relatively small young planet. This suggests that DS Tucanae Ab formed in a smooth disk that was not perturbed by the stellar companion DS Tucanae B.[18][19] DS Tucanae Ab might therefore be a good target to study in-situ planet-formation of short-period planets.
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X-ray flares of the young planet host DS Tuc A, 2022, arXiv:2208.07415
Montet, Benjamin T.; Feinstein, Adina D.; Luger, Rodrigo; Bedell, Megan E.; Gully-Santiago, Michael A.; Teske, Johanna K.; Xuesong Wang, Sharon; Butler, R. Paul; Flowers, Erin; Shectman, Stephen A.; Crane, Jeffrey D. (2020). "The Young Planet DS Tuc Ab has a Low Obliquity". The Astronomical Journal. 159 (3): 112. arXiv:1912.03794. Bibcode:2020AJ....159..112M. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/ab6d6d. S2CID208920990.
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