Characterizing a Diverse Trio of Warm Jupiter Systems from TESS

  • Special Talk

November 25, 2025 1:00 PM
PAIS 2540

Host:
Diana Dragomir
Presenter:
Ismael Mireles
TESS has discovered hundreds of exoplanets, many orbiting bright stars ideal for mass measurements and atmospheric characterization. They have shed new light on individual planets and larger populations alike. One such population is warm Jupiters – giant planets with periods between 10 and 200 days that bridge the gap to the solar system’s gas giants. I present my thesis results, characterizing three warm Jupiter systems with architectures that indicate distinct histories. TOI-4600 hosts a warm Jupiter and cold Jupiter. The latter is the second longest-period planet discovered by TESS. TOI-4127 b is a highly-eccentric warm Jupiter on a well-aligned orbit. An undetected second planet or star could explain the orbit as could resonant interactions with the protoplanetary disk. TOI-201 consists of a warm Jupiter, inner super-Earth, and outer brown dwarf. The brown dwarf’s eccentricity, the non-zero mutual inclinations, and the presence of the super-Earth raise questions for planet formation theories.

Upcoming Events

No Colloquium this week due to Spring Break

Physics and Astronomy Colloquium
Mar. 20, 3:30 PM - Mar. 20, 4:30 PM
PAIS 1100

Quantum control of qubits and qudits in neutral atom systems
Vikas Buchemmavari (UNM)
Thesis and Dissertation Defenses
Mar. 23, 3:15 PM
PAIS 2540

Probing Physics Beyond the Standard Model via Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay
Tensor Elmikawy (UNM)
Nuclear, Particle, Astroparticle and Cosmology (NUPAC) Seminars
Mar. 24, 2:00 PM
PAIS 3205

TBD
Rajorshi Bhattacharya
CART Astrophysics Seminar Series
Mar. 26, 2:00 PM - Mar. 26, 3:00 PM
PAIS 3205

Assessing PFAS contamination levels and toxicity in the wildlife of Holloman Lake, New Mexico: Key Insights from Five Years of Research.
Jean-Luc E. Cartron
Sigma Xi Public Talk
Mar. 26, 5:30 PM
Physics, Astronomy, & Interdisciplinary Science (PAIS), 210 Yale Blvd NE Rm 1100