Misplaced Pages

Wolf 1061d

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Super-Earth orbiting Wolf 1061
Wolf 1061 d
Discovery
Discovered byUniversity of New South Wales, Australia
Discovery siteEuropean Southern Observatory
Discovery dateDecember 18, 2015
Detection methodRadial Velocity
Orbital characteristics
Apastron0.7285 AU (108,980,000 km)
Periastron0.2115 AU (31,640,000 km)
Semi-major axis0.470
−0.17 AU
Eccentricity0.55
−0.09
Orbital period (sidereal)217.21
−0.52 d
Inclinationnull
StarWolf 1061
Physical characteristics
Mean radius~2.2 R🜨
Mass≥7.70
−1.06 ME
Temperature118 K (−155 °C; −247 °F)

Wolf 1061d is an exoplanet orbiting the red dwarf star Wolf 1061 in the Ophiuchus constellation, about 13.8 light years from Earth. It is the third and furthest planet in order from its host star in a triple planetary system, and has an orbital period of about 217 days.

Characteristics

Mass, Radius, and Temperature

Wolf 1061d is known as a Super-Earth, with a mass significantly greater than that of Earth, but less than the ice giants Uranus and Neptune. However, because it was found with the radial velocity method and does not transit, only the planet's minimum mass is known. Wolf 1061d is at least 7.70 ME, close to the upper limit of the Super-Earth range. If the planet is rocky, it would have to be around 1.7 R🜨. For a more likely mixed composition of both rock and volatiles, Wolf 1061d would be at least 2.2 R🜨.

The planet is one of the coldest known Super-Earths, with an equilibrium temperature calculated to be around 118 K (−155 °C; −247 °F). This is too cold for liquid water and would mean that the planet is entirely coated in ice, depending on its true composition. However, due to the planet's eccentric orbit, the temperature varies wildly from as high as 176 K (−97 °C; −143 °F) to a low of 95 K (−178.2 °C; −288.7 °F).

Orbit

The orbit of Wolf 1061d is one of the longest observed for a Super-Earth in orbit around a red dwarf, as well as very eccentric. The average distance between the planet and the star (the semi-major axis) is 0.470 AU, or 47% the distance between the Earth and the Sun. This is comparable to Mercury's semi-major axis of 0.387 AU. Unlike Mercury, Wolf 1061d takes 217.21 days to orbit its host star, compared to Mercury's orbital period of 88 days. It also has a much higher orbital eccentricity of 0.55, nearly twice as high as that of Mercury. Wolf 1061d swings from as close as 0.2115 AU to as far as 0.7285 AU during the course of its year.

Host Star

Main article: Wolf 1061

Wolf 1061d orbits the M3.5V red dwarf Wolf 1061, which is one of the nearest stars to Earth at a distance of just under 14 light years. It is 0.294 times the radius and about 0.307 times the mass of the Sun with a temperature of 3342 K and an unknown age. For comparison, the Sun has a temperature of 5778 K and an age of 4.5 billion years. Wolf 1061 is about 1% as luminous as the Sun.

Habitability

Although the low stellar flux, the presence of additional greenhouse gases like methane or even hydrogen gas might make Wolf 1061d marginally habitable, due to the high probability of Wolf 1061d being a mini-Neptune combined with questionable prospects of being habitable for Earth-like life in the conventional sense makes this exoplanet a poor candidate for being “potentially habitable”.

A re-analysis of the system in March 2017 showed that Wolf 1061d is likely non-habitable; it's too far from its star and more likely to be a Mini-Neptune, with a minimum mass almost 8 times that of Earth. Even at its closest approach, Wolf 1061d never enters the system's habitable zone.

See also

References

  1. ^ Astudillo-Defru, Nicola; Forveille, Thierry; Bonfils, Xavier; Ségransan, Damien; Bouchy, François; Delfosse, Xavier; et al. (2017). "The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets. XLI. A dozen planets around the M dwarfs GJ 3138, GJ 3323, GJ 273, GJ 628, and GJ 3293". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 602. A88. arXiv:1703.05386. Bibcode:2017A&A...602A..88A. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201630153. S2CID 119418595.
  2. "Planet reality check". 19 December 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-20.

External links

Wolf 1061 system
Stars
Planets
2015 in space
Space probe launches Space probes launched in 2015
Space probes
Space observatories
  • DSCOVR (weather satellite; Feb 2015)
  • Astrosat (space telescope; Sep 2015)


Impact events
Selected NEOs
Exoplanets Exoplanets discovered in 2015
Discoveries
Comets Comets in 2015
Space exploration
Constellation of Ophiuchus
Stars
Bayer
Flamsteed
Variable
HR
HD
Other
Exoplanets
Star
clusters
NGC
Other
Nebulae
NGC
Other
Galaxies
NGC
Other
Galaxy clusters
Astronomical events
Category
Celestial objects within 15–20 light-years    
Primary member type
Celestial objects by systems.
Subgiant stars
G-type
Main-sequence
stars
A-type
G-type
K-type
M-type
(red dwarfs)
Degenerate
stars
White dwarfs
Brown dwarfs
L-type
T-type
Y-type
Sub-brown dwarfs
and rogue planets
Y-type
Stub icon

This extrasolar-planet-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: