Los Angeles Times

Newly found world is just down the block

Researcher­s detect signs of a cold planet orbiting a star only six light-years away.

- DEBORAH NETBURN deborah.netburn @latimes.com

An internatio­nal team of astronomer­s has detected evidence of a cold planet at least three times the size of Earth orbiting an ancient red dwarf star, right in our stellar neighborho­od.

If you were traveling at the speed of light, it would take you just six years to reach it.

In the context of the universe, that’s basically right next door.

The newly discovered world, described this month in Nature, is associated with Barnard’s Star, a small, dim star that is older than our solar system. It takes the planet 233 days to complete a single orbit around its cool red sun.

It is now the secondclos­est known planet to our solar system.

The only closer known planet is an Earth-sized body that orbits the small red star Proxima Centauri in the Alpha Centauri triple star system. That planet was discovered in 2016 and lies just four light-years from Earth.

The planet around Barnard’s Star is probably too cold to host life, researcher­s said.

Although it is about as close to its own star as Mercury is to the sun, scientists say it is probably as cold as Saturn. That’s because Barnard’s Star emits only 0.4% of the sun’s radiant power.

But the new discovery is exciting for other reasons.

The proximity of the newly found planet to Earth makes it an excellent target for future observatio­ns. It is so close that the next generation of telescopes may be able to image it directly, the researcher­s said.

In addition, the new find provides further evidence that planets are nearly ubiquitous around red dwarf stars, said Ignasi Ribas, an astronomer and director of the Institute of Space Studies of Catalonia in Spain, who led the work.

“The chances of finding new ones is quite high,” he said.

The new detection was made by scientists working on an astronomy collaborat­ion called Red Dots. Together, they are scanning the night sky for planets orbiting nearby dim red dwarf stars. Ultimately they hope to find a world in the habitable zone of these stars, where liquid water could pool on its surface.

This is not the first time astronomer­s have thought they had found a planet around Barnard’s Star.

In the 1960,s Peter van de Kamp, a Dutch astronomer based in the United States, reported the discovery of two planets roughly the size of Jupiter orbiting the red dwarf.

To come to this conclusion, he used a technique called astrometry that measures the movement of a single star across the celestial sphere. The idea is that the gravity of a planet orbiting that star would cause the star to shift its position ever so slightly compared with more distant background stars.

Based on his observatio­ns, Van de Kamp believed one of the planets completed a full orbit around the dim star in 12 years, while the other completed its orbit in 20 years.

However, as astrometry measuremen­t techniques became more precise, scientists found that the supposed signals of Van de Kamp’s two planets did not exist after all.

The new discovery of a single, much smaller planet orbiting Barnard’s Star is based on a different observatio­nal technique called radial velocity. In this method, scientists use spectromet­ers to look for a small wobble in the light from the star that would indicate it has a planet orbiting around it.

“A light source that comes toward us would have its wavelength slightly blue shifted, while a light source that moves away from us has its wavelength slightly red shifted,” Ribas said.

The magnitude of the wobble reveals the minimum mass of the planet that is responsibl­e for the motion.

The radial velocity method was developed in the 1990s and has been steadily improving ever since, Ribas said. Even so, the size of the newly found planet is just on the edge of what current instrument­s can detect.

This particular discovery was possible only because the research team was able to examine hundreds of measuremen­ts that had been made over 20 years, he said. That gave them enough data to detect the small signal of the planet.

To ensure the detection was accurate, the authors also observed Barnard’s Star every possible night during 2016 and 2017 from the Calar Alto Astronomic­al Observator­y in Spain. A clear signal at a period of 233 days arose again and again.

Rodrigo Diaz, an astronomer at the University of Buenos Aires who was not involved in the new work, said that although the findings are promising, he’d like to see more evidence of the new planet’s existence.

“Difficult detections such as this one warrant confirmati­on by independen­t methods and research groups,” he said in an essay accompanyi­ng the study.

The European Space Agency’s Gaia Space Observator­y may be able to make detections that would further confirm the presence of a planet around Barnard’s Star, he said, but those data aren’t expected to be released until the 2020s.

Martin Kürster, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy who worked on the new study, said it is possible that the detection of the new planet could one day be disproved.

However, he thinks that the presence of the planet is currently the best interpreta­tion of the data the team has collected so far.

“It could be that a different explanatio­n for the observatio­nal evidence we have will be found in the future,” he said. “But I don’t think that is likely to happen.”

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