MANGOS 鈥 II. Five new giant planets orbiting low-mass stars
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 547:4 (2026) stag448
Abstract:
Giant planets orbiting low-mass stars on short orbits present a conundrum, as in the most extreme cases their existence cannot be reconciled with current models of core accretion. Therefore, surveys dedicated to finding these rare planets have a key role to play by growing the sample to overcome small number statistics. In this work, we present MANGOS, a programme dedicated to the search for giant objects (planets, brown dwarfs, and low-mass stars) orbiting M dwarfs. We report on the discovery of five new giant planets (TOI-3288 Ab, TOI-4666 b, TOI-5007 b, TOI-5292 Ab, TOI-5916 b) first detected by TESS, and confirmed using ground-based photometry and spectroscopy. The five planets have radii in the range of 0.99鈥1.12 , masses between 0.49 and 1.69 , and orbital periods between 1.43 and 2.91 d. We reveal that TOI-3288 and TOI-5292 are wide binaries, and in the case of TOI-5292, we are able to characterize both stellar components. We demonstrate that the planets presented are suitable for further characterization of their obliquities and atmospheres. We detect a small but significant eccentricity for TOI-5007 b, although for this to be more robust, more observations are needed to fully sample the orbit. Finally, we reveal a correlation between stellar metallicity and planet bulk density for giant planets orbiting low-mass stars.Two temperate Earth- and Neptune-sized planets orbiting fully convective M dwarfs
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2026) stag070
Abstract:
As the diversity of exoplanets continues to grow, it is important to revisit assumptions about habitability and classical HZ definitions. In this work, we introduce an expanded 鈥檛emperate鈥 zone, defined by instellation fluxes between 0.1 < S/S鈯 < 5, thus encompassing a broader range of potentially habitable worlds. We also introduce the TEMPOS survey, which aims to produce a catalogue of precise radii for temperate planets orbiting M dwarfs with Teff 鈮 3400 K. This work reports the discovery and characterisation of two planets in this temperate regime orbiting mid-type M dwarfs: TOI-6716 b, a Rb = 0.98 卤 0.07 R鈯 planet orbiting its M4 host star (R鈰 = 0.231 卤 0.015R 鈯, M鈰 = 0.223 卤 0.011 M 鈯, Teff = 3110 卤 80 K) with a period $P=4.7185898^{+0.0000054}_{-0.0000041}\, \mathrm{d}$ , and TOI-7384 b, a Rb = 3.56 卤 0.21 R鈯 planet orbiting an M4 (R鈰 = 0.319 卤 0.018R 鈯, M鈰 = 0.318 卤 0.016 M 鈯, Teff = 3185 卤 75 K) star every $P=6.2340258^{+0.0000034}_{-0.0000036}\, \mathrm{d}$ . The radii of TOI-6716 b and TOI-7384 b have precisions of 6.8 % and 5.9 % respectively. We validate these planets with multi-band ground-based photometric observations, high-resolution imaging and statistical analyses. We find these planets to have instellation fluxes close to the inner (hotter) edge of the temperate zone, with Sb = 4.4 卤 1.1 S鈯 and Sb = 4.9 卤 1.1 S鈯 for TOI-6716 b and TOI-7384 b respectively. Also, with a predicted TSM similar to the TRAPPIST-1 planets, TOI-6716 b is likely to be a good rocky-world JWST target, should it have retained its atmosphere.A Cold and Superpuffy Planet on a Prograde Orbit
The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 996:1 (2025) L13
Abstract:
We report the discovery of TOI-4507 b, a transiting sub-Saturn with a density <0.2 g cm鈭3 on a 105 days prograde orbit around a 700 Myr old F star. The transits were detected using data from TESS as well as the Antarctic telescope ASTEP. A joint analysis of the light curves and radial velocities from HARPS, FEROS, and CORALIE confirmed the planetary nature of the signal, by limiting the mass to be below 20 M鈯 at 95% confidence. The radial velocities also exhibit the Rossiter鈥揗cLaughlin effect and imply that the planet orbits the star in a prograde orbit with a sky-projected obliquity 位=鈭15鈭44+50 掳 (鈭N烩垼 < 80掳 at 3蟽). With these characteristics, TOI-4507 is one of the longest-period systems for which the stellar obliquity has been measured, and the planet is among the longest-period and youngest 鈥渟uperpuff鈥 planets yet discovered.TOI-6478 b: a cold underdense Neptune transiting a fully convective M dwarf from the thick disc
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 540:2 (2025) 1909-1927
Abstract:
Growing numbers of exoplanet detections continue to reveal the diverse nature of planetary systems. Planet formation around late-type M dwarfs is of particular interest. These systems provide practical laboratories to measure exoplanet occurrence rates for M dwarfs, thus testing how the outcomes of planet formation scale with host mass, and how they compare to Sun-like stars. Here, we report the discovery of TOI-6478 b, a cold ( K) Neptune-like planet orbiting an M5 star (, , K) that is a member of the Milky Way鈥檚 thick disc. We measure a planet radius of on a d orbit. Using radial velocities, we calculate an upper mass limit of (, with confidence. TOI-6478 b is a milestone planet in the study of cold Neptune-like worlds. Due to its large atmospheric scale height, it is amenable to atmospheric characterization with facilities such as JWST, and will provide an excellent probe of atmospheric chemistry in this cold regime. It is one of very few transiting exoplanets that orbit beyond their system鈥檚 ice-line whose atmospheric chemical composition can be measured. Based on our current understanding of this planet, we estimate TOI-6478 b鈥檚 spectroscopic features (in transmission) can be as high as the widely studied planet K2-18 b.TOI-2015 b: A sub-Neptune in strong gravitational interaction with an outer non-transiting planet
Astronomy and Astrophysics 695 (2025)