4.7 Article

A ∼5 M⊕ super-earth orbiting GJ 436?: The power of near-grazing transits

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 677, Issue 1, Pages L59-L62

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/587961

Keywords

planetary systems; planetary systems : formation; stars : individual (GJ 436)

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Most of the presently identified exoplanets have masses similar to that of Jupiter and therefore are assumed to be gaseous objects. With the ever-increasing interest in discovering lower mass planets, several of the so-called super-Earths (1 M-circle plus < M < 10 M-circle plus), which are predicted to be rocky, have already been found. Here we report the possible discovery of a planet around the M-type star GJ 436 with a minimum mass of 4.7 +/- 0.6 M-circle plus and a true mass of similar to 5 M-circle plus, which would make it the least massive planet around a main- sequence star found to date. The planet is identified from its perturbations on an inner Neptune-mass transiting planet ( GJ 436b), by pumping eccentricity and producing variations in the orbital inclination. Analysis of published radial velocity measurements indeed reveals a significant signal corresponding to an orbital period that is very close to the 2 : 1 mean motion resonance with the inner planet. The near-grazing nature of the transit makes it extremely sensitive to small changes in the inclination.

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