Authors
Michaël Gillon, Emmanuël Jehin, Susan M Lederer, Laetitia Delrez, Julien de Wit, Artem Burdanov, Valérie Van Grootel, Adam J Burgasser, Amaury HMJ Triaud, Cyrielle Opitom, Brice-Olivier Demory, Devendra K Sahu, Daniella Bardalez Gagliuffi, Pierre Magain, Didier Queloz
Publication date
2016/5/12
Journal
Nature
Volume
533
Issue
7602
Pages
221-224
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Star-like objects with effective temperatures of less than 2,700 kelvin are referred to as ‘ultracool dwarfs’. This heterogeneous group includes stars of extremely low mass as well as brown dwarfs (substellar objects not massive enough to sustain hydrogen fusion), and represents about 15 per cent of the population of astronomical objects near the Sun. Core-accretion theory predicts that, given the small masses of these ultracool dwarfs, and the small sizes of their protoplanetary disks,, there should be a large but hitherto undetected population of terrestrial planets orbiting them—ranging from metal-rich Mercury-sized planets to more hospitable volatile-rich Earth-sized planets. Here we report observations of three short-period Earth-sized planets transiting an ultracool dwarf star only 12 parsecs away. The inner two planets receive four times and two times the irradiation of Earth, respectively, placing them close to the …
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