Using the ultra-precise HARPS spectrograph on
ESO's 3.6-m telescope at La Silla (Chile), a team of European
astronomers have discovered that a nearby star is host to
three Neptune-mass planets. The innermost planet is most
probably rocky, while the outermost is the first known
Neptune-mass planet to reside in the habitable zone. This
unique system is likely further enriched by an asteroid belt.
"For the first time, we have discovered a
planetary system composed of several Neptune-mass planets",
said Christophe Lovis, from the Geneva Observatory and
lead-author of the paper presenting the results [1].
During more than two years, the astronomers
carefully studied HD 69830, a rather inconspicuous nearby star
slightly less massive than the Sun. Located 41 light-years
away towards the constellation of Puppis (the Stern), it is,
with a visual magnitude of 5.95, just visible with the unaided
eye. The astronomers' precise radial- velocity measurements
[2] allowed them to discover the presence of three tiny
companions orbiting their parent star in 8.67, 31.6 and 197
days.
"Only ESO's HARPS instrument installed at the La
Silla Observatory, Chile, made it possible to uncover these
planets", said Michel Mayor, also from Geneva Observatory, and
HARPS Principal Investigator. "Without any doubt, it is
presently the world's most precise planet- hunting machine"
[3].
The detected velocity variations are between 2
and 3 metres per second, corresponding to about 9 km/h! That's
the speed of a person walking briskly. Such tiny signals could
not have been distinguished from 'simple noise' by most of
today's available spectrographs.
The newly found planets have minimum masses
between 10 and 18 times the mass of the Earth. Extensive
theoretical simulations favour an essentially rocky
composition for the inner planet, and a rocky/gas structure
for the middle one. The outer planet has probably accreted
some ice during its formation, and is likely to be made of a
rocky/ icy core surrounded by a quite massive envelope.
Further calculations have also shown that the system is in a
dynamically stable configuration.
The outer planet also appears to be located near
the inner edge of the habitable zone, where liquid water can
exist at the surface of rocky/icy bodies. Although this planet
is probably not Earth-like due to its heavy mass, its
discovery opens the way to exciting perspectives.
With three roughly equal-mass planets, one being
in the habitable zone, and an asteroid belt, this planetary
system shares many properties with our own solar system.
"This alone makes this system already
exceptional", said Willy Benz, from Bern University, and
co-author. "But the recent discovery by the Spitzer Space
Telescope that the star most likely hosts an asteroid belt is
adding the cherry to the cake."
"The planetary system around HD 69830 clearly
represents a Rosetta stone in our understanding of how planets
form", said Michel Mayor. "No doubt it will help us better
understand the huge diversity we have observed since the first
extra-solar planet was found 11 years ago."
Notes
[1] These results appear in the 18 May issue of
the research journal Nature ("Discovery of an extrasolar
planetary system with three Neptune-Mass Planets", by C. Lovis
et al.). The team is composed of Christophe Lovis, Michel
Mayor, Francesco Pepe, Didier Queloz, and Stephane Udry
(Observatoire de l'Universite de Geneve, Switzerland), Nuno C.
Santos (Observatoire de l'Université de Geneve, Switzerland,
Centro de Astronomia e Astrofisica da Universidade de Lisboa
and Centro de Geofisica de Evora, Portugal), Yann Alibert,
Willy Benz, Christoph Mordasini (Physikalisches Institut der
Universitaet Bern, Switzerland), François Bouchy (Observatoire
de Haute-Provence and IAP, France), Alexandre C. M. Correia
(Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal), Jacques Laskar
(IMCCE-CNRS, Paris, France), Jean-Loup Bertaux (Service
d'Aéronomie du CNRS, France), and Jean-Pierre Sivan
(Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille, France).
[2] A planet in orbit around a star will
manifest its presence by pulling the star in different
directions, thereby changing by rather small amounts its
measured velocity. Astronomers therefore measure with very
high precision the velocity of a star to detect the signature
of one or more planets.
[3] The High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet
Searcher (HARPS) at the ESO La Silla 3.6-m telescope is
dedicated to the discovery of extrasolar planets. It is a
fibre-fed high-resolution echelle spectrograph that has
demonstrated a long-term precision of about 1 m/s.
Contacts:
Christophe Lovis and Michel
Mayor
Observatoire de l'Universite de Geneve,
Switzerland
Phone: +41 22 379 24 07, +41 22 379 24
60
E-mail: Christophe.Lovis@obs.unige.ch,
Michel.Mayor@obs.unige.ch
Yann Alibert and Willy Benz
Physikalisches
Institut der Universitat Bern, Switzerland
Phone: +41 31
631 44 27, +41 31 631 44 03
E-mail:
yann.alibert@phim.unibe.ch, willy.benz@phim.unibe.ch
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