Localizado a apenas 33 anos-luz da Terra, o sistema parece hospedar dois planetas rochosos do tamanho da Terra.
Um novo sistema multi-planetário foi descoberto em nossa galáxia vizinha por astrônomos em[{” attribute=””>MIT and elsewhere. It lies just 10 parsecs, or about 33 light-years, from Earth, making it one of the closest known multiplanet systems to our own.
At the heart of the system lies a small and cool M-dwarf star, named HD 260655, and astronomers have found that it hosts at least two terrestrial, Earth-sized planets. The rocky worlds have relatively tight orbits, exposing the planets to temperatures that are too high to sustain liquid surface water. Therefore, they are unlikely to be habitable.
Nevertheless, scientists are excited about this system because the proximity and brightness of its star will give them a closer look at the properties of the planets and signs of any atmosphere they might hold.
“Both planets in this system are each considered among the best targets for atmospheric study because of the brightness of their star,” says Michelle Kunimoto, a postdoc in MIT’s Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research and one of the discovery’s lead scientists. “Is there a volatile-rich atmosphere around these planets? And are there signs of water or carbon-based species? These planets are fantastic test beds for those explorations.”
The team will present its discovery on June 15, 2022, at the meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Pasadena, California. Team members at MIT include Katharine Hesse, George Ricker, Sara Seager, Avi Shporer, Roland Vanderspek, and Joel Villaseñor, along with collaborators from institutions around the world.
Data power
The new planetary system was initially identified by NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), an MIT-led mission that is designed to observe the nearest and brightest stars, and detect periodic dips in light that could signal a passing planet.
In October 2021, Kunimoto, a member of MIT’s TESS science team, was monitoring the satellite’s incoming data when she noticed a pair of periodic dips in starlight, or transits, from the star HD 260655.
She ran the detections through the mission’s science inspection pipeline, and the signals were soon classified as two TESS Objects of Interest, or TOIs — objects that are flagged as potential planets. The same signals were also found independently by the Science Processing Operations Center (SPOC), the official TESS planet search pipeline based at NASA Ames. Scientists typically plan to follow up with other telescopes to confirm that the objects are indeed planets.
The process of classifying and subsequently confirming new planets can often take several years. For HD 260655, that process was shortened significantly with the help of archival data.
Soon after Kunimoto identified the two potential planets around HD 260655, Shporer looked to see whether the star was observed previously by other telescopes. As luck would have it, HD 260655 was listed in a survey of stars taken by the High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES), an instrument that operates as part of the Keck Observatory in Hawaii. HIRES had been monitoring the star, along with a host of other stars, since 1998, and the researchers were able to access the survey’s publicly available data.
HD 260655 was also listed as part of another independent survey by CARMENES, an instrument that operates as part of the Calar Alto Observatory in Spain. As these data were private, the team reached out to members of both HIRES and CARMENES with the goal of combining their data power.
“These negotiations are sometimes quite delicate,” Shporer notes. “Luckily, the teams agreed to work together. This human interaction is almost as important in getting the data [as the actual observations]. “
puxar planetas
Em última análise, este esforço colaborativo rapidamente confirmou a presença de dois planetas em torno de HD 260655 em cerca de seis meses.
Para confirmar que os sinais do TESS eram de fato de dois planetas em órbita, os pesquisadores analisaram dados de HIRES e CARMENES da estrela. Ambas as pesquisas medem a oscilação gravitacional de uma estrela, também conhecida como sua velocidade radial.
“Cada planeta orbitando uma estrela terá uma pequena força gravitacional em sua estrela”, explica Kunimoto. “O que estamos procurando é qualquer movimento leve desta estrela que possa indicar um objeto de massa planetária puxando-a.”
De ambos os conjuntos de dados de arquivo, os pesquisadores encontraram sinais estatisticamente significativos de que os sinais detectados pelo TESS eram de fato dois planetas em órbita.
“Então sabíamos que tínhamos algo muito emocionante”, diz Sporer.
A equipe então examinou de perto os dados do TESS para determinar as características de ambos os planetas, incluindo seu período orbital e tamanho. Eles determinaram que o planeta interior, apelidado de HD 260655b, orbita a estrela a cada 2,8 dias e é cerca de 1,2 vezes o tamanho da Terra. O segundo exoplaneta, HD 260655c, gira a cada 5,7 dias e tem 1,5 vezes a massa da Terra.
A partir de dados de velocidade radial de HIRES e CARMENES, os pesquisadores conseguiram calcular a massa dos planetas, que está diretamente relacionada à amplitude com que cada planeta arrasta sua estrela. Eles descobriram que o planeta interior tem uma massa duas vezes a massa da Terra, enquanto o planeta exterior tem uma massa de cerca de três massas terrestres. A partir de seu tamanho e massa, a equipe estimou a densidade de cada planeta. O planeta interno menor é um pouco mais denso que a Terra, enquanto o planeta externo maior é um pouco menos denso. Ambos os planetas, dependendo de suas densidades, são provavelmente terrestres ou rochosos em composição.
Os pesquisadores também estimaram, com base em suas órbitas curtas, que a superfície interna do planeta é uma torrefação de 710 K (818 graus).[{” attribute=””>Fahrenheit), while the outer planet is around 560 °K (548 °F).
“We consider that range outside the habitable zone, too hot for liquid water to exist on the surface,” Kunimoto says.
“But there might be more planets in the system,” Shporer adds. “There are many multiplanet systems hosting five or six planets, especially around small stars like this one. Hopefully, we will find more, and one might be in the habitable zone. That’s optimistic thinking.”
This research was supported, in part, by NASA, the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, and the European Regional Development Fund.
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