Abstract

We present the discovery of TOI-1420b, an exceptionally low-density (ρ = 0.08 ± 0.02 g cm−3) transiting planet in a P = 6.96 days orbit around a late G-dwarf star. Using transit observations from TESS, LCOGT, Observatoire Privé du Mont, Whitin, Wendelstein, OAUV, Ca l’Ou, and KeplerCam, along with radial velocity observations from HARPS-N and NEID, we find that the planet has a radius of R p = 11.9 ± 0.3R ⊕ and a mass of M p = 25.1 ± 3.8M ⊕. TOI-1420b is the largest known planet with a mass less than 50M ⊕, indicating that it contains a sizeable envelope of hydrogen and helium. We determine TOI-1420b’s envelope mass fraction to be , suggesting that runaway gas accretion occurred when its core was at most four to five times the mass of the Earth. TOI-1420b is similar to the planet WASP-107b in mass, radius, density, and orbital period, so a comparison of these two systems may help reveal the origins of close-in low-density planets. With an atmospheric scale height of 1950 km, a transmission spectroscopy metric of 580, and a predicted Rossiter–McLaughlin amplitude of about 17 m s−1, TOI-1420b is an excellent target for future atmospheric and dynamical characterization.

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