The Lick-Carnegie Exoplanet Survey: A Uranus-mass Fourth Planet for GJ 876 in an Extrasolar Laplace Configuration
Eugenio J. Rivera, Gregory Laughlin, R. Paul Butler, Steven S. Vogt,, Nader Haghighipour, Stefano Meschiari

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a Uranus-mass fourth planet in the GJ 876 system, revealing a Laplace resonance configuration and demonstrating the system's long-term stability through detailed radial velocity analysis.
Contribution
The study provides the first detection of a Uranus-mass planet in GJ 876 and characterizes its resonant orbital dynamics using extensive radial velocity data and N-body simulations.
Findings
Discovery of a 12.9 Earth-mass planet in GJ 876 system.
Confirmation of a Laplace resonance among four planets.
System stable for at least a billion years.
Abstract
(Abreviated) Continued radial velocity monitoring of the nearby M4V red dwarf star GJ~876 with Keck/HIRES has revealed the presence of a Uranus-mass fourth planetary companion in the system. The new planet has a mean period of days (over the 12.6-year baseline of the radial velocity observations), and a minimum mass of . Self-consistent, N-body fits to the radial velocity data set show that the four-planet system has an invariable plane with an inclination relative to the plane of the sky of . The fit is not significantly improved by the introduction of a mutual inclination between the planets ``b'' and ``c,'' but the new data do confirm a non-zero eccentricity, for the innermost planet, ``d.'' In our best-fit coplanar model, the mass of the new component is . Our…
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