A temperate exo-Earth around a quiet M dwarf at 3.4 parsecs
Xavier Bonfils, Nicola Astudillo-Defru, Rodrigo D\'iaz, Jose-Manuel, Almenara, Thierry Forveille, Fran\c{c}ois Bouchy, Xavier Delfosse, Cristophe, Lovis, Michel Mayor, Felipe Murgas, Francesco Pepe, Nuno C. Santos, Damien, S\'egransan, St\'ephane Udry, Ana\"el W\"unsche

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a temperate exo-Earth around a quiet M dwarf star at 3.4 parsecs, highlighting its potential for atmospheric characterization with future extremely large telescopes.
Contribution
It presents the detection and characterization of Ross 128 b, a nearby temperate exo-Earth orbiting a quiet M dwarf, emphasizing its suitability for future atmospheric studies.
Findings
Ross 128 b is a nearby exo-Earth at 3.4 parsecs.
The planet receives Earth-like insolation and is near the habitable zone.
It has weak stellar activity, favoring atmospheric retention.
Abstract
The combination of high-contrast imaging and high-dispersion spectroscopy, which has successfully been used to detect the atmosphere of a giant planet, is one of the most promising potential probes of the atmosphere of Earth-size worlds. The forthcoming generation of extremely large telescopes (ELTs) may obtain sufficient contrast with this technique to detect O in the atmosphere of those worlds that orbit low-mass M dwarfs. This is strong motivation to carry out a census of planets around cool stars for which habitable zones can be resolved by ELTs, i.e. for M dwarfs within 5 parsecs. Our HARPS survey has been a major contributor to that sample of nearby planets. Here we report on our radial velocity observations of Ross 128 (Proxima Virginis, GJ447, HIP 57548), an M4 dwarf just 3.4 parsec away from our Sun. This source hosts an exo-Earth with a projected mass $m \sin i =…
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