2018
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0677-y
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A candidate super-Earth planet orbiting near the snow line of Barnard’s star

Abstract: At a distance of 1.8 parsecs 1 , Barnard's star (Gl 699) is a red dwarf with the largest apparent motion of any known stellar object. It is the closest single star to the Sun, second only to the a Centauri triple stellar system. Barnard's star is also among the least magnetically active red dwarfs known 2,3 and has an estimated age older than our Solar System. Its properties have made it a prime target for planet searches employing techniques such as radial velocity 4,5,6 , astrometry 7,8 , and direct imaging … Show more

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Cited by 117 publications
(77 citation statements)
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“…The stars within 100 pc represent ∼ 67% of our HARPS sample. This collection of stars, are representative of a volume-limited, long-lasting HARPS surveys dedicated to solar-mass G-dwarf stars (Pepe et al 2004;Lo Curto et al 2010;Moutou et al 2011;Lo Curto et al 2013;Udry et al 2019), low-mass M-dwarfs Trifon Trifonov et al: A public HARPS radial velocity database corrected for systematic errors (Bonfils et al 2005;Mayor et al 2009;Forveille et al 2009;Bonfils et al 2013;Anglada-Escudé et al 2016;Astudillo-Defru et al 2017;Ribas et al 2018) and metal-poor stars (Santos et al 2011;Faria et al 2016;Mortier et al 2016), which all target nearby stars. The remaining ∼ 28% of the HARPS sample (with distance > 120 pc) are typically bright main sequence stars of spectral types A0 to F6, some fainter and more distant transiting planet hosts observed by more recent RV follow-up campaigns of transit planet candidates from the HATSouth (Bakos et al 2013;Brahm et al 2016;Henning et al 2018;Espinoza et al 2019), WASP-south (Pollacco et al 2006;Gillon et al 2009;Nielsen et al 2019), and the K2 extended mission (Howell et al 2014;Grziwa et al 2016;Johnson et al 2018), or evolved subgiant and giant branch stars of spectral types G8 IV − K4 III.…”
Section: The Harps Data and The Stellar Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The stars within 100 pc represent ∼ 67% of our HARPS sample. This collection of stars, are representative of a volume-limited, long-lasting HARPS surveys dedicated to solar-mass G-dwarf stars (Pepe et al 2004;Lo Curto et al 2010;Moutou et al 2011;Lo Curto et al 2013;Udry et al 2019), low-mass M-dwarfs Trifon Trifonov et al: A public HARPS radial velocity database corrected for systematic errors (Bonfils et al 2005;Mayor et al 2009;Forveille et al 2009;Bonfils et al 2013;Anglada-Escudé et al 2016;Astudillo-Defru et al 2017;Ribas et al 2018) and metal-poor stars (Santos et al 2011;Faria et al 2016;Mortier et al 2016), which all target nearby stars. The remaining ∼ 28% of the HARPS sample (with distance > 120 pc) are typically bright main sequence stars of spectral types A0 to F6, some fainter and more distant transiting planet hosts observed by more recent RV follow-up campaigns of transit planet candidates from the HATSouth (Bakos et al 2013;Brahm et al 2016;Henning et al 2018;Espinoza et al 2019), WASP-south (Pollacco et al 2006;Gillon et al 2009;Nielsen et al 2019), and the K2 extended mission (Howell et al 2014;Grziwa et al 2016;Johnson et al 2018), or evolved subgiant and giant branch stars of spectral types G8 IV − K4 III.…”
Section: The Harps Data and The Stellar Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, there are hints in the data that super-Earths do not always come as members of compact multiple systems. For example, the recently discovered super-Earth orbiting with a period of 233 days around Barnard's star indicates a lack of close orbiting planets with similar masses in that system (Ribas et al 2018), and certainly none that became anchored at the inner edge of the protoplanetary disc during their formation, as often occurs in N-body simulations of planet formation that involve pebble drift or planet migration. Similarly, Proxima b, orbiting with a period of 11 days does not appear to have closely neighbouring planets of similar masses (Anglada-Escudé et al 2016).…”
Section: Intrinsic Multiplicities From Rv Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Observations show that the water snow line also potentially affects the occurence of giant planets (Fernandes et al 2019). The recent discovery of a super-Earth orbiting Barnard's Star b at the location of the water snow line (Ribas et al 2018) provides further evidence of the importance of the ice line in planet formation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%