The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets XXXV. Planetary systems and stellar activity of the M dwarfs GJ 3293, GJ 3341, and GJ 3543
N. Astudillo-Defru, X. Bonfils, X. Delfosse, D. Segransan, T., Forveille, F. Bouchy, M. Gillon, C. Lovis, M. Mayor, V. Neves, F. Pepe, C., Perrier, D. Queloz, P. Rojo, N. C. Santos, S. Udry

TL;DR
This study uses HARPS to monitor three M dwarfs over five years, detecting multiple low-mass exoplanets and distinguishing stellar activity from planetary signals through detailed radial velocity analysis.
Contribution
It presents new dense RV time series data for three M dwarfs and identifies several low-mass exoplanets, advancing methods to separate stellar activity from planetary signals.
Findings
GJ 3293 hosts two Neptune-mass planets and a super-Earth.
GJ 3341 hosts a super-Earth with a 14-day period.
GJ 3543's RV variations are due to stellar activity, not planets.
Abstract
Context. Planetary companions of a fixed mass induce larger amplitude reflex motions around lower-mass stars, which helps make M dwarfs excellent targets for extra-solar planet searches. State of the art velocimeters with 1m/s stability can detect very low-mass planets out to the habitable zone of these stars. Low-mass, small, planets are abundant around M dwarfs, and most known potentially habitable planets orbit one of these cool stars. Aims. Our M-dwarf radial velocity monitoring with HARPS on the ESO 3.6m telescope at La Silla observatory makes a major contribution to this sample. Methods. We present here dense radial velocity (RV) time series for three M dwarfs observed over years: GJ 3293 (0.42M), GJ 3341 (0.47M), and GJ 3543 (0.45M). We extract those RVs through minimum matching of each spectrum against a high S/N ratio stack of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
