Credit:
ESO/M. Kornmesser
The frozen world is at least 3.2 times the mass of Earth and is only six light-years away, according to a study based on the research that was published in Nature.
It’s a find of special significance, following the recent detection of an Earth-mass planet orbiting the closest star to us, Proxima Centauri. The two discoveries show greater evidence for rocky worlds in our galactic neighborhood.
“We have recently learned from the Kepler space telescope that small planets appear to be common, but Kepler surveyed a small patch of sky, and found planets around stars [that are] hundreds if not thousands of times farther away than Barnard’s star,” said co-author Johanna Teske, a postdoctoral exoplanetary scientist at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C.
“So we are still to some extent left wondering, how common are small planets much closer to home? This result, on the heels of the Proxima Centauri b discovery, adds evidence to small planets being common everywhere in the galaxy, including around the nearest stars to us.”
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Credit:
ESO/M. Kornmesser
The solution was to use the CARMENES instrument, which analyzes light to such sensitivity that it detected wobbles in Barnard’s Star as small as human walking speed. (CARMENES stands for a complicated set of words — Calar Alto high-Resolution search for M dwarfs with Exoearths with Near-infrared and optical Échelle Spectrographs — which basically refer to looking for small, Earth-sized planets near red dwarf stars.)
CARMENES is installed at the 3.5m telescope at the Calar Alto Observatory in Spain, and it’s a new entry to planet-seeking instruments, having only seen “first light” in 2016. But the researchers were able to use it for a lengthy observing campaign between 2016 and 2017. Once they added in the work from CARMENES to the other data sets, Teske said, the researchers saw enough validity in the data to publish the results.
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“This discovery was very challenging — the velocity of the signal detected is similar if not slower than the average human walking speed — and required the collaboration between independent groups to combine many data sets that spanned tens of years,” Teske explained. “So, I think this discovery points towards the power and necessity of collaborating across teams, as well as intense observing campaigns like that of CARMENES.”
Credit:
ESO/Digitized Sky Survey 2 Acknowledgement: Davide De Martin
These questions could be answered by a future instrument that could take direct images of close-up planets, such as NASA’s Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) telescope, which is slated to launch in the 2020s. (The project is in some flux since the Trump administration requested its cancellation in NASA’s 2019 budget, but the telescope work continues under a spending bill.)
Teske said that there are hints that there might be another planet around Barnard’s Star, although it’s difficult to determine if the signal that investigators saw is from the star itself or from another planet. The European Space Agency’s Gaia mission could eventually shed light on this question, since the spacecraft is designed to precisely track the movements of stars.
Finding a planet near Barnard’s Star shows the value of combining a bunch of datasets on planet searching, something that is already ongoing with the Red Dots campaign, whose goal is to find terrestrial planets at stars nearby our own sun.
“I hope we can contribute to more discoveries like this — small planets around nearby stars,” Teske said, “to ultimately help answer the question, how unique is Earth?”