July 5, 2020

Artist’s impression showing a Neptune-sized planet in the Neptunian Desert (Image courtesy University of Warwick/Mark Garlick)

An article published in the journal “Nature” reports a study on the exoplanet TOI-849b, which appears to be the core of a gas giant stripped of its atmosphere. A team of researchers led by Dr. David Armstrong of the British University of Warwick used data collected by NASA’s TESS space telescope and ESO’s HARPS spectrograph to estimate the characteristics of TOI-849b. The result was that its mass is approximately 40 times the Earth’s with a size similar to Neptune’s, which means that its density is similar to the Earth’s. Its proximity to its star is probably the reason why it doesn’t have an atmosphere, although the possibility remains that it’s a sort of failed gas giant that couldn’t capture gas after the formation of the observed core.