Magnetic properties of Proxima Centauri b analogues
Jorge I. Zuluaga (SEAP/IF/UdeA), Sebastian Bustamante (H-ITS)

TL;DR
This study predicts the radius and magnetic properties of Proxima Centauri b analogues using planetary evolution models, providing insights into their potential magnetic fields and habitability.
Contribution
It introduces a statistical methodology to estimate magnetic and physical properties of Proxima b analogues based on a comprehensive grid of planetary models.
Findings
Proxima b likely has a mass between 1.3 and 2.3 Earth masses.
Most analogues develop dynamos lasting over 4 billion years.
Dynamo dipole moments could be 0.32 to 2.3 times Earth's dipole moment.
Abstract
The discovery of a planet around the closest star to our Sun, Proxima Centauri, represents a quantum leap in the testability of exoplanetary models. Unlike any other discovered exoplanet, models of Proxima b could be contrasted against near future telescopic observations and far future in-situ measurements. In this paper we aim at predicting the planetary radius and the magnetic properties (dynamo lifetime and magnetic dipole moment) of Proxima b analogues (solid planets with masses of , rotation periods of several days and habitable conditions). For this purpose we build a grid of planetary models with a wide range of compositions and masses. For each point in the grid we run the planetary evolution model developed in \citet{Zuluaga2013}. Our model assumes small orbital eccentricity, negligible tidal heating and earth-like radiogenic mantle elements abundances. We…
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