The gravitational mass of Proxima Centauri measured with SPHERE from a microlensing event
A. Zurlo, R. Gratton, D. Mesa, S. Desidera, A. Enia, K. Sahu, J.-M., Almenara, P. Kervella, H. Avenhaus, J. Girard, M. Janson, E. Lagadec, M., Langlois, J. Milli, C. Perrot, J.-E. Schlieder, C. Thalmann, A. Vigan, E., Giro, L. Gluck, J. Ramos, A. Roux

TL;DR
This study used gravitational microlensing observed with HST and VLT/SPHERE to directly measure the gravitational mass of Proxima Centauri, providing a novel and more direct estimate compared to previous indirect methods.
Contribution
It presents the first direct measurement of Proxima Centauri's gravitational mass using microlensing, refining its mass estimate with high-precision astrometric data.
Findings
Mass of Proxima Centauri estimated at 0.150+0.062-0.051 solar masses
Successful detection of astrometric shift due to microlensing in 2016
First direct gravitational mass measurement of Proxima Centauri
Abstract
Proxima Centauri, our closest stellar neighbour, is a low-mass M5 dwarf orbiting in a triple system. An Earth-mass planet with an 11 day period has been discovered around this star. The star's mass has been estimated only indirectly using a mass-luminosity relation, meaning that large uncertainties affect our knowledge of its properties. To refine the mass estimate, an independent method has been proposed: gravitational microlensing. By taking advantage of the close passage of Proxima Cen in front of two background stars, it is possible to measure the astrometric shift caused by the microlensing effect due to these close encounters and estimate the gravitational mass of the lens (Proxima Cen). Microlensing events occurred in 2014 and 2016 with impact parameters, the closest approach of Proxima Cen to the background star, of 1\farcs6 0\farcs1 and 0\farcs5 0\farcs1,…
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