4.6 Article

HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N at TNG XIII. A sub-Neptune around the M dwarf GJ 720 A

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 649, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202140490

Keywords

stars: late-type; planetary systems; stars: individual: GJ 720 A

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University, and Research through the PREMIALE WOW 2013 research project under grant Ricerca di pianeti intorno a stelle di piccola massa
  2. David and Lucile Packard Fellowship [AST-0807690, AST-1109468, AST-1616624, AST-1004488]
  3. National Science Foundation [AST-0807690, AST-1109468, AST-1616624, AST-1004488]
  4. John Templeton Foundation
  5. DPAC
  6. Spanish Ministry for Science, Innovation, and Universities [AYA-2016-79425-C3-1/2/3-P, AYA2015-69350-C3-2-P, ESP2017-87676-C5-2-R, ESP2017-87143-R]
  7. Spanish State Research Agency (AEI) Project [MDM-2017-0737]
  8. ASI-INAF agreement 2018-22-HH.0 Partecipazione alla fase B1 della missione ARIEL
  9. Accordo Attuativo ASI-INAF [2018.22.HH.O]
  10. Partecipazione alla fase B1 della missione Ariel
  11. ASI-INAF [2018-16-HH.0]
  12. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
  13. European Regional Development Fund [PGC2018-098153-B-C33]
  14. Generalitat de Catalunya/CERCA programme
  15. Spanish MICINN under the 2013 Ramon y Cajal program [RYC-2013-14875]
  16. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) under the 2019 Juan de la Cierva Programme
  17. Fundacion La Caixa
  18. Spanish MICINN [AYA2017-86389-P]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study focused on detecting small planets around M-dwarf stars, particularly on the M0.5 V star GJ 720 A located 15.56 pc away. By analyzing radial velocity, stellar activity indicators, and photometric light curves, the researchers identified a subNeptune mass planet orbiting GJ 720 A.
Context. The high number of super-Earth and Earth-like planets in the habitable zone detected around M-dwarf stars in recent years has revealed these stellar objects to be the key to planetary radial velocity (RV) searches. Aims. Using the HARPS-N spectrograph within The HArps-n red Dwarf Exoplanet Survey (HADES) we have reached the precision needed to detect small planets with a few Earth masses using the spectroscopic radial velocity technique. HADES is mainly focused on the M-dwarf population of the northern hemisphere. Methods. We obtained 138 HARPS-N RV measurements between 2013 May and 2020 September of GJ 720 A, classified as an M0.5 V star located at a distance of 15.56 pc. To characterize the stellar variability and to distinguish the periodic variation due to the Keplerian signals from those related to stellar activity, the HARPS-N spectroscopic activity indicators and the simultaneous photometric observations with the APACHE and EXORAP transit surveys were analyzed. We also took advantage of TESS, MEarth, and SuperWASP photometric surveys. The combined analysis of HARPS-N RVs and activity indicators let us address the nature of the periodic signals. The final model and the orbital planetary parameters were obtained by simultaneously fitting the stellar variability and the Keplerian signal using a Gaussian process regression and following a Bayesian criterion. Results. The HARPS-N RV periodic signals around 40 days and 100 days have counterparts at the same frequencies in HARPS-N activity indicators and photometric light curves. We thus attribute these periodicities to stellar activity; the first period is likely associated with the stellar rotation. GJ 720 A shows the most significant signal at 19.466 +/- 0.005 days with no counterparts in any stellar activity indices. We hence ascribe this RV signal, having a semi-amplitude of 4.72 +/- 0.27 ms(-1), to the presence of a subNeptune mass planet. The planet GJ 720 Ab has a minimum mass of 13.64 +/- 0.79 M-circle plus, it is in circular orbit at 0.119 +/- 0.002 AU from its parent star, and lies inside the inner boundary of the habitable zone around its parent star.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available