The remarkable solar twin HIP 56948: a prime target in the quest for other Earths
Jorge Melendez, Maria Bergemann, Judith G. Cohen, Michael Endl, Amanda, I. Karakas, Ivan Ramirez, William D. Cochran, David Yong, Phillip J., MacQueen, Chiaki Kobayashi, Martin Asplund

TL;DR
HIP 56948 is an exceptionally similar solar twin to the Sun, with precise measurements showing minimal differences in physical and chemical properties, making it an ideal candidate for hosting Earth-like planets.
Contribution
This study provides the most precise differential abundance analysis of HIP 56948, confirming its near-identical nature to the Sun and its potential to host terrestrial planets.
Findings
HIP 56948 is only 17 K hotter than the Sun.
No giant planets detected within the habitable zone.
Chemical abundance pattern suggests possible terrestrial planet formation.
Abstract
We study HIP 56948, the best solar twin known to date, to determine with an unparalleled precision how similar is to the Sun in its physical properties, chemical composition and planet architecture. We explore whether the abundances anomalies may be due to pollution from stellar ejecta or to terrestrial planet formation. We perform a differential abundance analysis (both in LTE and NLTE) using high resolution (R = 100,000) high S/N (600) Keck HIRES spectra of the Sun and HIP 56948. We use precise radial velocity data from the McDonald and Keck observatories to search for planets around this star. We achieve a precision of sigma = 0.003 dex for several elements. Including errors in stellar parameters the total uncertainty is as low as sigma = 0.005 dex (1 %), which is unprecedented in elemental abundance studies. The similarities between HIP 56948 and the Sun are astonishing. HIP…
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