Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | Mann et al. (THYME)[1] |
Discovery date | 30 April 2020[1] |
Transit[2] | |
Designations | |
TOI-1726 c, BD+27 1490 c, HIP 38228 c, V377 Geminorum c | |
Orbital characteristics[1] | |
0.1448+0.0073 −0.0077 AU | |
Eccentricity | 0.21+0.33 −0.14 |
20.54 days | |
Inclination | 89.28°+0.4° −0.22° |
Star | HD 63433 |
Physical characteristics[3] | |
2.692±0.108 R🜨 | |
Mass | 15.54±3.86 M🜨 |
Mean density | 4.6±1.3 g/cm3 |
Temperature | Teq: 540+10 −9[a] — 679+13 −11 K [b] |
HD 63433 c (TOI-1726 c) is a mini-Neptune exoplanet orbiting the Sun-like star HD 63433.[4] It is the outermost planet in its planetary system, being located 0.1448 astronomical units (21,660,000 km) from its star, and completing one orbit every 21 days.[1] Despite being the outermost planet in the system, it is still located close to its star, meaning that its temperature is hot, being estimated between 267 and 406 °C.[3] HD 63433 c is about 2.7 times larger than Earth and 15.5 times more massive,[3] but still smaller and less massive than Neptune.[note 1] In 2022, a study showed that its atmosphere, made up of hydrogen, is being evaporated by the strong radiation from its star, causing it to slowly turn into a super-Earth planet.[6][7]
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