A Low-mass Exoplanet Candidate Detected by K2 Transiting the Praesepe M Dwarf JS 183

2017 
We report the discovery of a repeating photometric signal from a low-mass member of the Praesepe open cluster that we interpret as a Neptune-sized transiting planet. The star is JS 183 (HSHJ 163, EPIC 211916756), with T_(eff) = 3325 ± 100 K, M* = 0.44 ± 0.04 M⊙, R* = 0.44 ± 0.03 R⊙, and log g* = 4.82 ± 0.06. The planet has an orbital period of 10.134588 days and a radius of R_P = 0.32 ± 0.02 R_J. Since the star is faint at V = 16.5 and J = 13.3, we are unable to obtain a measured radial velocity orbit, but we can constrain the companion mass to below about 1.7 M J, and thus well below the planetary boundary. JS 183b (since designated as K2-95b) is the second transiting planet found with K2 that resides in a several-hundred-megayear open cluster; both planets orbit mid-M dwarf stars and are approximately Neptune sized. With a well-determined stellar density from the planetary transit, and with an independently known metallicity from its cluster membership, JS 183 provides a particularly valuable test of stellar models at the fully convective boundary. We find that JS 183 is the lowest-density transit host known at the fully convective boundary, and that its very low density is consistent with current models of stars just above the fully convective boundary but in tension with the models just below the fully convective boundary.
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