Monitoring the radio emission of Proxima Centauri
Miguel P\'erez-Torres, Jos\'e Francisco G\'omez, Jos\'e Luis Ortiz,, Paolo Leto, Guillem Anglada, Jos\'e Luis G\'omez, Eloy Rodr\'iguez, Corrado, Trigilio, Pedro J. Amado, Antonio Alberdi, Guillem Anglada-Escud\'e, Mayra, Osorio, Grazia Umana, Zaira Berdi\~nas

TL;DR
This study presents extensive radio observations of Proxima Centauri, revealing periodic, polarized radio emissions likely caused by star-planet magnetic interactions, offering a new method for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
First detection of star-planet interaction signatures in radio emission from Proxima Centauri, demonstrating potential for radio-based exoplanet detection methods.
Findings
Radio emission peaks near Proxima b's quadratures
Detected circular polarization consistent with electron cyclotron-maser emission
Observed long-duration burst and short flares linked to star-planet interaction
Abstract
We present results from the most comprehensive radio monitoring campaign towards the closest star to our Sun, Proxima Centauri. We report 1.1 to 3.1 GHz observations with the Australian Telescope Compact Array over 18 consecutive days in April 2017. We detect radio emission from Proxima Centauri for most of the observing sessions, which spanned 1.6 orbital periods of the planet Proxima b. The radio emission is stronger at the low-frequency band, centered around 1.6 GHz, and is consistent with the expected electron-cyclotron frequency for the known star's magnetic field intensity of about 600 Gauss. The 1.6 GHz light curve shows an emission pattern that is consistent with the orbital period of the planet Proxima b around the star Proxima, with its maxima of emission happening near the quadratures. We also observed two short-duration (a few minutes) flares and a long-duration (about…
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