Two nearby sub-Earth-sized exoplanet candidates in the GJ 436 system
Kevin B. Stevenson, Joseph Harrington, Nate B. Lust, Nikole K. Lewis,, Guillaume Montagnier, Julianne I. Moses, Channon Visscher, Jasmina Blecic,, Ryan A. Hardy, Patricio Cubillos, and Christopher J. Campo

TL;DR
This paper reports the potential discovery of two sub-Earth-sized exoplanets orbiting GJ 436, using Spitzer data, highlighting their sizes, possible masses, and orbital parameters, and discussing their atmospheric and habitability implications.
Contribution
First detection of multiple transiting sub-Earth-sized exoplanet candidates around GJ 436, expanding known planetary system diversity outside Kepler field.
Findings
UCF-1.01 has a radius of 0.66 Earth radii and a 1.36586-day orbit.
Evidence suggests a second candidate, UCF-1.02, with a radius of 0.65 Earth radii.
Both candidates likely have masses around 0.28 Earth masses and low surface gravity.
Abstract
We report the detection of UCF-1.01, a strong exoplanet candidate with a radius 0.66 +/- 0.04 times that of Earth (R_{\oplus}). This sub-Earth-sized planet transits the nearby M-dwarf star GJ 436 with a period of 1.365862 +/- 8x10^{-6} days. We also report evidence of a 0.65 +/- 0.06 R_{\oplus} exoplanet candidate (labeled UCF-1.02) orbiting the same star with an undetermined period. Using the Spitzer Space Telescope, we measure the dimming of light as the planets pass in front of their parent star to assess their sizes and orbital parameters. If confirmed, UCF-1.01 and UCF-1.02 would be called GJ 436c and GJ 436d, respectively, and would be part of the first multiple-transiting-planet system outside of the Kepler field. Assuming Earth-like densities of 5.515 g/cm^3, we predict both candidates to have similar masses (~0.28 Earth-masses, M_{\oplus}, 2.6 Mars-masses) and surface gravities…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
