Searching for GEMS: Three warm Saturns and a super-Jupiter orbiting four early M-dwarfs

Abstract

We report the confirmation and characterization of four transiting giant planets orbiting early-M dwarfs discovered by the Searching for Giant Exoplanets around M-dwarf Stars (GEMS) survey: TOI-7189 b, TOI-7265B b, TOI-7393 b, and TOI-7394B b. Joint modeling of TESS and ground-based photometry with precision radial velocities from the Habitable-zone Planet Finder and NEID spectrographs yields self-consistent orbital and physical parameters for all systems. The planets have short orbital periods (P = 1.25-4.17 days), masses spanning from 0.5\,M J to 2.1\,M J, and radii comparable to Jupiter (0.95\,R J < Rp < 1.02\,R J). TOI-7189 b (0.50\,M J), TOI-7265B b (0.71\,M J), and TOI-7393 b (0.61\,M J) are Saturn-like in mass and density, whereas TOI-7394B b is a dense super-Jupiter (2.10\,M J, p ≈ 2.4 g cm-3) on a 1.25-day orbit. All hosts are early-M dwarfs with a narrow range of stellar properties, enabling a controlled comparison of giant-planet outcomes around low-mass stars. Three systems orbit super-solar metallicity stars, while TOI-7393 ([Fe/H] = -0.35 0.16) is the most metal-poor GEMS host identified to date, and exhibits kinematics consistent with the thin/thick-disk transition, suggestive of an older stellar population. Together, these systems reveal substantial diversity in the masses and bulk properties of short-period giant planets orbiting early-M dwarfs, demonstrating that markedly different planetary outcomes can arise around stars with otherwise similar fundamental properties.

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