A quarter century of spectroscopic monitoring of the nearby M dwarf Gl 514. A super-Earth on an eccentric orbit moving in and out of the habitable zone
M. Damasso, M. Perger, J. M. Almenara, D. Nardiello, M., P\'erez-Torres, A. Sozzetti, N. C. Hara, A. Quirrenbach, X. Bonfils, M. R., Zapatero Osorio, N. Astudillo-Defru, J. I. Gonz\'alez Hern\'andez, A., Su\'arez Mascare\~no, P. J. Amado, T. Forveille, J. Lillo-Box, Y. Alibert

TL;DR
This study presents a 25-year spectroscopic monitoring of the nearby M dwarf Gl 514, revealing a super-Earth in an eccentric orbit within the habitable zone, with no evidence of additional long-period companions.
Contribution
First long-term radial velocity analysis of Gl 514, demonstrating the detection of a super-Earth with an eccentric orbit in the habitable zone using advanced filtering techniques.
Findings
Detected a super-Earth with 5.2 Earth masses and 140-day period.
Found the planet's orbit to be eccentric with e=0.45.
Ruled out the presence of massive companions within several tens of au.
Abstract
We investigated the presence of planetary companions around the nearby (7.6 pc) and bright ( mag) early-type M dwarf Gl 514, analysing 540 radial velocities collected over nearly 25 years with the HIRES, HARPS, and CARMENES spectrographs. The data are affected by time-correlated signals at the level of 2-3 ms due to stellar activity, that we filtered out testing three different models based on Gaussian process regression. As a sanity cross-check, we repeated the analyses using HARPS radial velocities extracted with three different algorithms. We used HIRES radial velocities and Hipparcos-Gaia astrometry to put constraints on the presence of long-period companions, and we analysed TESS photometric data. We found strong evidence that Gl 514 hosts a super-Earth on a likely eccentric orbit, residing in the conservative habitable zone for nearly of its orbital period. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
