English

Planet Detectability in the Alpha Centauri System

Earth and Planetary Astrophysics 2017-12-27 v1

Abstract

We use more than a decade of radial velocity measurements for α\alpha Cen A, B, and Proxima Centauri from HARPS, CHIRON, and UVES to identify the MsiniM \sin i and orbital periods of planets that could have been detected if they existed. At each point in a mass-period grid, we sample a simulated, Keplerian signal with the precision and cadence of existing data and assess the probability that the signal could have been produced by noise alone. Existing data places detection thresholds in the classically defined habitable zones at about MsiniM \sin i of 53 M_{\oplus} for α\alpha Cen A, 8.4 M_{\oplus} for α\alpha Cen B, and 0.47 M_{\oplus} for Proxima Centauri. Additionally, we examine the impact of systematic errors, or "red noise" in the data. A comparison of white- and red-noise simulations highlights quasi-periodic variability in the radial velocities that may be caused by systematic errors, photospheric velocity signals, or planetary signals. For example, the red-noise simulations show a peak above white-noise simulations at the period of Proxima Centauri b. We also carry out a spectroscopic analysis of the chemical composition of the α\alpha Centauri stars. The stars have super-solar metallicity with ratios of C/O and Mg/Si that are similar to the Sun, suggesting that any small planets in the α\alpha Cen system may be compositionally similar to our terrestrial planets. Although the small projected separation of α\alpha Cen A and B currently hampers extreme-precision radial velocity measurements, the angular separation is now increasing. By 2019, α\alpha Cen A and B will be ideal targets for renewed Doppler planet surveys.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1711.06320,
  title  = {Planet Detectability in the Alpha Centauri System},
  author = {Lily L. Zhao and Debra A. Fischer and John M. Brewer and Matt Giguere and Bárbara Rojas-Ayala},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.06320},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

16 pages, 7 figures, data provided in appendix. Accepted for publication in ApJ

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