A terrestrial planet candidate in a temperate orbit around Proxima Centauri
View/ Open
Author
Anglada-Escude, Guillem
Amado, Pedro J.
Barnes, John
Berdinas, Zaira M.
Butler, Paul
Coleman, Gavin A. L.
de la Cueva, Ignacio
Dreizler, Stefan
Endl, Michael
Giesers, Benjamin
Jeffers, Sandra V.
Jenkins, James S.
Jones, Hugh
Kiraga, Marcin
Kurster, Martin
Lopez-Gonzalez, Maria J.
Marvin, Christopher J.
Morales, Nicolas
Morin, Julien
Nelson, Richard P.
Ortiz, Jose L.
Ofir, Aviv
Paardekooper, Sijme-Jan
Reiners, Ansgar
Rodriguez, Eloy
Rodriguez-Lopez, Cristina
Sarmiento, Luis F.
Strachan, John P.
Tsapras, Yiannis
Tuomi, Mikko
Zechmeister, Mathias
Attention
2299/17249
Abstract
At a distance of 1.295 parsecs, the red dwarf Proxima Centauri (α Centauri C, GL 551, HIP 70890 or simply Proxima) is the Sun’s closest stellar neighbour and one of the best-studied low-mass stars. It has an effective temperature of only around 3,050 kelvin, a luminosity of 0.15 per cent of that of the Sun, a measured radius of 14 per cent of the radius of the Sun and a mass of about 12 per cent of the mass of the Sun. Although Proxima is considered a moderately active star, its rotation period is about 83 days and its quiescent activity levels and X-ray luminosity4 are comparable to those of the Sun. Here we report observations that reveal the presence of a small planet with a minimum mass of about 1.3 Earth masses orbiting Proxima with a period of approximately 11.2 days at a semi-major-axis distance of around 0.05 astronomical units. Its equilibrium temperature is within the range where water could be liquid on its surface.