astro.wikisort.org - MeteoriteKapteyn b is an exoplanet that orbits within the habitable zone of the red subdwarf Kapteyn's Star, located approximately 12.8 light-years (3.92 parsecs) from Earth. Kapteyn b is within the estimated habitable zone of its star.[2] It was the closest-suspected potentially habitable exoplanet to the Solar System other than Tau Ceti e up until 2016, when Proxima Centauri b at 4.22 light-years was confirmed. It was pushed into fourth when Ross 128 b was confirmed in 2017. Later research had cast doubt on the existence of Kapteyn b, suggesting the signal is consistent with stellar activity rather than a planet.[3] This doubt, however, has been refuted by the original discovery team,[4] only to reappear in stronger form in 2021.[5] The system itself is estimated to be 11 billion years old, substantially older than the Solar System.[2]
Goldilocks super-Earth exoplanet orbiting Kapteyn's Star
Kapteyn b[1][2] Artist's impression of Kapteyn b |
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Discovered by | HARPS |
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Discovery date | June 2014 |
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Detection method | Radial velocity |
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Semi-major axis | 0.168+0.006 −0.008 AU |
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Eccentricity | 0.21+0.11 −0.10 |
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Orbital period (sidereal) | 48.616+0.036 −0.032 d |
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Star | Kapteyn's Star |
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Mean radius | 1.6+0.41 −0.4 REarth |
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Mass | 4.8+0.9 −1.0 MEarth |
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Mean density | 6.44 g/cm3 |
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Temperature | 205 K (−68 °C; −91 °F) |
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Characteristics
Mass, radius, and temperature
Kapteyn b is a super-Earth, a planet that has a radius and mass bigger than that of Earth, but smaller than that of the ice giants Uranus and Neptune. It has a surface temperature of 205 K (−68 °C; −91 °F). It has a mass greater than or equal to 4.8 MEarth and a radius less than or equal to around 1.6 REarth, depending on its composition, making it a likely rocky world.
Host star
The planet orbits a red subdwarf star named Kapteyn's Star. The star has a mass of 0.27 M☉, a radius of 0.29 R☉ and has about 1.2% of the Sun's luminosity. It has a surface temperature of 3,550 K and is roughly 11 billion years old. In comparison, the Sun is about 4.6 billion years old[6] and has a surface temperature of 5,778 K.[7]
The star's apparent magnitude, or how bright it appears from Earth's perspective, is 8.85. It is too dim to be seen with the naked eye, but can be seen with good binoculars.
Orbit
Kapteyn b makes a complete orbit around its parent star about every 48.62 days at a distance of 0.17 AU (compared to Mercury, which orbits at a distance of around 0.39 AU). It has an eccentricity of 0.21, meaning its orbit is mildly elliptical.
Habitability
See also: Habitability of red dwarf systems
The exoplanet was announced to be orbiting in the habitable zone of its parent star, the region where, with the correct conditions and atmospheric properties, liquid water may exist on the surface of the planet. Kapteyn b has a radius range of 1.2–1.6 REarth, so it is likely rocky. Its host star is a red subdwarf, with a little more than a quarter as much mass than the Sun does. As a result, stars like Kapteyn's Star have the ability to live up to 100–200 billion years, ten to twenty times longer than the Sun will live.[8]
Another crucial factor in habitability is temperature and atmospheric properties. The estimated equilibrium temperature for Kapteyn b is around 205 K (−68 °C; −91 °F), too cold to support liquid water on the surface. Without the proper greenhouse gases in its atmosphere (if it has one), it is likely to be a planet covered in ice. However, if it has enough CO2 in its atmosphere, the surface temperature may rise enough to have water exist in its liquid form on the surface.[original research?]
Discovery
The planet was first discovered by the HARPS spectrometer which is housed at the European Southern Observatory's La Silla Observatory in Chile. Further confirmations of the planetary detection were made at the Keck Observatory in Hawaii and at the PFS Observatory, also in Chile.[2] The method of discovery involved observing and recording tiny wobbles in the star caused by the gravitational tug of its planets, using Doppler spectroscopy.[2]
Additional planet
One other planet has been detected within the same planetary system. It is designated "Kapteyn c" and orbits further out from the star, beyond the outer edge of the habitable zone.[2] It is considered to be too cold for stellar-light-based life.[2]
See also
References
- Anglada-Escude, G.; et al. (8 July 2014). "Two planets around Kapteyn's star: a cold and a temperate super-Earth orbiting the nearest halo red dwarf". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters. 443: L89–L93. arXiv:1406.0818. Bibcode:2014MNRAS.443L..89A. doi:10.1093/mnrasl/slu076.
- Wall, Mike (3 June 2014). "Found! Oldest Known Alien Planet That Might Support Life". Space.com. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
- Robertson, Paul (11 May 2015). "Stellar activity mimics a habitable-zone planet around Kapteyn's star". The Astrophysical Journal. 805 (2): L22. arXiv:1505.02778. Bibcode:2015ApJ...805L..22R. doi:10.1088/2041-8205/805/2/L22.
- Anglada-Escudé, G.; Tuomi, M.; Arriagada, P.; Zechmeister, M.; Jenkins, J. S.; Ofir, A.; Dreizler, S.; E. Gerlach; Marvin, C. J. (2016). "No Evidence for Activity Correlations in the Radial Velocities of Kapteyn's Star". The Astrophysical Journal. 830 (2): 74. arXiv:1506.09072. Bibcode:2016ApJ...830...74A. doi:10.3847/0004-637X/830/2/74. ISSN 0004-637X.
- A Gaussian Process Regression Reveals No Evidence for Planets Orbiting Kapteyn’s Star, arXiv:2103.02709
- Cain, Fraser (16 September 2008). "How Old is the Sun?". Universe Today. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Cain, Fraser (15 September 2008). "Temperature of the Sun". Universe Today. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Adams, Fred C.; Laughlin, Gregory; Graves, Genevieve J. M. "Red Dwarfs and the End of the Main Sequence". Gravitational Collapse: From Massive Stars to Planets. Revista Mexicana de Astronomía y Astrofísica. pp. 46–49. Bibcode:2004RMxAC..22...46A.
External links
← Celestial objects within 10–15 light-years → |
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Primary member type | Celestial objects by systems. |
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Main-sequence stars | G-type | |
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K-type | |
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M-type (red dwarfs) |
- Ross 248 (10.3057±0.0014 ly)
- Lacaille 9352 (10.7241±0.0007 ly)
- 2 (3?) planets: b, c, d?
- Ross 128 (11.0074±0.0011 ly)
- planet b
- EZ Aquarii (11.109±0.034 ly)
- 2 red dwarfs: B, C
- Struve 2398 (11.4908±0.0009 ly)
- red dwarf B
- 2 planets: Bb, Bc
- Groombridge 34 (11.6191±0.0008 ly)
- red dwarf B
- 2 planets: Ab, Ac
- DX Cancri (11.6797±0.0027 ly)
- Gliese 1061 (11.9839±0.0014 ly)
- 3 planets: b, c, d
- YZ Ceti (12.1222±0.0015 ly)
- 3 (4?) planets: b, c, d, e?
- Luyten's Star (12.3485±0.0019 ly)
- 4 planets: b, c, d, e
- Teegarden's Star (12.4970±0.0045 ly)
- 2 planets: b, c
- Kapteyn's Star (12.8308±0.0008 ly)
- 2 planets: b, c
- Lacaille 8760 (12.9472±0.0018 ly)
- SCR 1845-6357 (13.0638±0.0070 ly)
- T-type brown dwarf B
- Kruger 60 (13.0724±0.0052 ly)
- red dwarf B
- DEN 1048−3956 (13.1932±0.0027 ly)
- Ross 614 (13.363±0.040 ly)
- red dwarf B
- Wolf 1061 (14.0500±0.0016 ly)
- 3 planets: b, c, d
- Gliese 1 (14.1747±0.0022 ly)
- TZ Arietis (14.5780±0.0046 ly)
- Wolf 424 (14.595±0.031 ly)
- red dwarf B
- Gliese 687 (14.8395±0.0014 ly)
- planet b
- Gliese 674 (14.8492±0.0018 ly)
- planet b
- LHS 292 (14.8706±0.0041 ly)
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Brown dwarfs | T-type |
- UGPS J0722-0540 (13.43±0.13 ly)
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Astrobiology |
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Disciplines |
- Astrochemistry
- Astrophysics
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Main topics |
- Abiogenesis
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- Ocean planet
- Panspermia
- Planetary protection
- Search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI)
- Yamato meteorite
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Planetary habitability | |
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Space missions | Earth orbit | |
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Mars |
- Beagle 2
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- Tianwen-1
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- Viking
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Comets and asteroids |
- Hayabusa2
- OSIRIS-REx
- Rosetta
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Planned |
- BioSentinel
- Dragonfly
- Europa Clipper
- ExoMars
- Rosalind Franklin rover
- Kazachok lander
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Proposed |
- Breakthrough Enceladus
- BRUIE
- CAESAR
- Enceladus Explorer
- Enceladus Life Finder
- Enceladus Life Signatures and Habitability
- Enceladus Orbilander
- Europa Lander
- ExoLance
- Explorer of Enceladus and Titan
- Icebreaker Life
- Journey to Enceladus and Titan
- Laplace-P
- Life Investigation For Enceladus
- Mars sample return mission
- Oceanus
- THEO
- Trident
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Cancelled and undeveloped | |
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Institutions and programs |
- Astrobiology Society of Britain
- Astrobiology Science and Technology for Exploring Planets
- Breakthrough Initiatives
- Breakthrough Listen
- Breakthrough Message
- Breakthrough Starshot
- Carl Sagan Institute
- Center for Life Detection Science
- European Astrobiology Network Association
- MERMOZ
- NASA Astrobiology Institute
- Nexus for Exoplanet System Science
- Ocean Worlds Exploration Program
- Spanish Astrobiology Center
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Events and objects | |
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Signals of interest | Misidentified |
- CP 1919 (misidentified pulsar)
- CTA-102 (misidentified quasar)
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Stars | |
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Other |
- SHGb02+14a (radio source)
- Wow! signal (inconclusive)
- Fast radio burst (unknown origin)
- BLC1 (radio signal)
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Life in the Universe |
- Earliest known life forms
- Habitability of Enceladus
- Habitability of Europa
- Habitability of Mars
- Habitability of Titan
- Habitability of Venus
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Planetary habitability | |
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Space missions |
- Beagle 2
- Biological Oxidant and Life Detection
- BioSentinel
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- Darwin
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- Enceladus Explorer
- Enceladus Life Finder
- Europa Clipper
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Interstellar communication |
- Active SETI
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Exhibitions | |
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Hypotheses |
- Aestivation hypothesis
- Ancient astronauts
- Cosmic pluralism
- Directed panspermia
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- Fermi paradox
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- Interplanetary contamination
- Kardashev scale
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Related topics |
- Astrobiology
- Astroecology
- Biosignature
- Brookings Report
- Planetary protection
- Potential cultural impact of extraterrestrial contact
- Post-detection policy
- Exotheology
- Extraterrestrials in fiction
- Extremophile
- MERMOZ
- Nexus for Exoplanet System Science
- Noogenesis
- San Marino Scale
- Technosignature
- UFO religion
- Xenoarchaeology
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На других языках
[de] Kapteyn b
Kapteyn b ist ein Exoplanet und umkreist Kapteyns Stern, einen 13 Lichtjahre von unserer Sonne entfernten roten Unterzwerg im Sternbild Pictor am Südhimmel.[1]
- [en] Kapteyn b
[es] Kapteyn b
Kapteyn b es un exoplaneta descubierto en 2014 por el equipo HARPS del Observatorio de La Silla (Chile) y confirmado posteriormente por otros observatorios alrededor del mundo.[1] Situado a 12,8 años luz, es el exoplaneta más cercano al sistema solar con posibilidades de albergar vida tras Tau Ceti e.[2]
[ru] Каптейн b
Каптейн b — экзопланета[1] (тёплая суперземля, хотя не исключен вариант нептуна или газового карлика[2]) у звезды Каптейна, субкарлика, удалённого от Земли на расстояние около 13 световых лет (3,91 парсек) в направлении созвездия Живописца[3]. Наряду с Каптейн c, одна из двух возможных экзопланет в системе. По состоянию на 2014 год являлась старейшей среди обнаруженных на тот момент потенциально жизнепригодных экзопланет[4]. Возраст оценивается в 11,5 млрд лет, что делает экзопланету всего на 2 млрд лет моложе Вселенной.
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