Diving into the planetary system of Proxima with NIRPS -- Breaking the metre per second barrier in the infrared
Alejandro Su\'arez Mascare\~no, \'Etienne Artigau, Lucile Mignon, Xavier Delfosse, Neil J. Cook, Fran\c{c}ois Bouchy, Ren\'e Doyon, Jonay I. Gonz\'alez Hern\'andez, Thomas Vandal, Izan de Castro Le\~ao, Atanas K. Stefanov, Jo\~ao Faria, Charles Cadieux, Pierrot Lamontagne

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that NIRPS can achieve sub-meter per second precision in the infrared, enabling detailed characterization of Proxima's planetary system and confirming the stability and detection of Proxima d.
Contribution
First high-resolution infrared spectroscopic analysis of Proxima using NIRPS, achieving unprecedented radial velocity precision and confirming the existence of Proxima d with improved parameters.
Findings
NIRPS provides more precise radial velocities than HARPS.
Detection of Proxima b and d in the infrared data.
Confirmation of the stability of Proxima d's parameters over time.
Abstract
We obtained 420 high-resolution spectra of Proxima, over 159 nights, using the Near Infra Red Planet Searcher (NIRPS). We derived 149 nightly binned radial velocity measurements with a standard deviation of 1.69 m/s and a median uncertainty of 55 cm/s, and performed a joint analysis combining radial velocities, spectroscopic activity indicators, and ground-based photometry, to model the planetary and stellar signals present in the data, applying multi-dimensional Gaussian process regression to model the activity signals. We detect the radial velocity signal of Proxima b in the NIRPS data. All planetary characteristics are consistent with those previously derived using visible light spectrographs. In addition, we find evidence of the presence of the sub-Earth Proxima d in the NIRPS data. When combining the data with the HARPS observations taken simultaneous to NIRPS, we obtain a…
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