A team of astronomers using the European Southern Observatory's Very Large
Telescope (ESO's VLT) in Chile have found evidence of another planet
orbiting Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our Solar System. This
candidate planet is the third detected in the system and the lightest yet
discovered orbiting this star. At just a quarter of Earth's mass, the planet
is also one of the lightest exoplanets ever found.
"The discovery shows that our closest stellar neighbor seems to be packed
with interesting new worlds, within reach of further study and future
exploration," explains João Faria, a researcher at the Instituto de
AstrofÃsica e Ciências do Espaço, Portugal and lead author of the study
published today in Astronomy & Astrophysics. Proxima Centauri is the
closest star to the sun, lying just over four light-years away.
The newly discovered planet, named Proxima d, orbits Proxima Centauri at a
distance of about four million kilometers, less than a tenth of Mercury's
distance from the sun. It orbits between the star and the habitable zone—the
area around a star where liquid water can exist at the surface of a
planet—and takes just five days to complete one orbit around Proxima
Centauri.
The star is already known to host two other planets: Proxima b, a planet
with a mass comparable to that of Earth that orbits the star every 11 days
and is within the habitable zone, and candidate Proxima c, which is on a
longer five-year orbit around the star.
Proxima b was discovered a few years ago using the HARPS instrument on ESO's
3.6-meter telescope. The discovery was confirmed in 2020 when scientists
observed the Proxima system with a new instrument on ESO's VLT that had
greater precision, the Echelle SPectrograph for Rocky Exoplanets and Stable
Spectroscopic Observations (ESPRESSO). It was during these more recent VLT
observations that astronomers spotted the first hints of a signal
corresponding to an object with a five-day orbit. As the signal was so weak,
the team had to conduct follow-up observations with ESPRESSO to confirm that
it was due to a planet, and not simply a result of changes in the star
itself.
"After obtaining new observations, we were able to confirm this signal as a
new planet candidate," Faria says. "I was excited by the challenge of
detecting such a small signal and, by doing so, discovering an exoplanet so
close to Earth."
At just a quarter of the mass of Earth, Proxima d is the lightest exoplanet
ever measured using the radial velocity technique, surpassing a planet
recently discovered in the L 98-59 planetary system. The technique works by
picking up tiny wobbles in the motion of a star created by an orbiting
planet's gravitational pull. The effect of Proxima d's gravity is so small
that it only causes Proxima Centauri to move back and forth at around 40
centimeters per second (1.44 kilometers per hour).
"This achievement is extremely important," says Pedro Figueira, ESPRESSO
instrument scientist at ESO in Chile. "It shows that the radial velocity
technique has the potential to unveil a population of light planets, like
our own, that are expected to be the most abundant in our galaxy and that
can potentially host life as we know it."
"This result clearly shows what ESPRESSO is capable of and makes me wonder
about what it will be able to find in the future," Faria adds.
ESPRESSO's search for other worlds will be complemented by ESO's Extremely
Large Telescope (ELT), currently under construction in the Atacama Desert,
which will be crucial to discovering and studying many more planets around
nearby stars.
This research was presented in the paper "A candidate short-period sub-Earth
orbiting Proxima Centauri" to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysics.
Reference:
J. P. Faria et al, A candidate short-period sub-Earth orbiting Proxima
Centauri, Astronomy & Astrophysics (2022).
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202142337
Tags:
Space & Astrophysics
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