The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs, Wolf 1069 b: Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone of a nearby, very low-mass star
D. Kossakowski, M. K\"urster, T. Trifonov, Th. Henning, J. Kemmer, J., A. Caballero, R. Burn, S. Sabotta, J. S. Crouse, T. J. Fauchez, E. Nagel, A., Kaminski, E. Herrero, E. Rodr\'iguez, E. Gonz\'alez-\'Alvarez, A., Quirrenbach, P. J. Amado, I. Ribas, A. Reiners, J. Aceituno

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone of a nearby low-mass star using radial velocity data, highlighting its potential for future habitability studies and planet formation insights.
Contribution
First detection of an Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone around a very low-mass star using telluric-corrected RV data from CARMENES, with detailed stellar activity analysis.
Findings
Planet Wolf 1069b has a 15.6-day orbit in the habitable zone.
Additional planets more massive than Earth with periods under 10 days are ruled out.
The host star's rotation period is approximately 169 days.
Abstract
We present the discovery of an Earth-mass planet () on a 15.6d orbit of a relatively nearby (9.6pc) and low-mass () M5.0V star, Wolf 1069. Sitting at a separation of au away from the host star puts Wolf 1069b in the habitable zone (HZ), receiving an incident flux of . The planetary signal was detected using telluric-corrected radial-velocity (RV) data from the CARMENES spectrograph, amounting to a total of 262 spectroscopic observations covering almost four years. There are additional long-period signals in the RVs, one of which we attribute to the stellar rotation period. This is possible thanks to our photometric analysis including new, well-sampled monitoring campaigns undergone with the OSN and TJO facilities that supplement archival photometry (i.e., from MEarth and SuperWASP),…
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