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SPECULOOS-3
Ultra-cool dwarf star orbited by an exoplanet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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SPECULOOS-3, also known as LSPM J2049+3336, is a red dwarf star (spectral type M6.5) located 54.6 light-years from Earth[4] in the constellation Cygnus. It is one of the smallest known stars, and is much cooler, dimmer and smaller than the Sun, having 0.1 times the mass, 0.08% the Sun's luminosity, and an effective temperature of 2,800 K (2,530 °C), which is less than half of the Sun's temperature (5,772 K).[4] It is orbited by one known exoplanet, and is the second ultra-cool dwarf discovered to have a planetary system, after TRAPPIST-1.[7][8]
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Stellar properties
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The age of SPECULOOS-3 is constrained at 6.6 billion years, 44% older than the Solar System, with significant margins of error. A bayesian analysis of the star derived a mass of 0.101 M☉, an effective temperature of 2,800 K (2,530 °C; 4,580 °F) and a luminosity of 8.35×10−6 L☉. These characteristics classify SPECULOOS-3 as an ultracool dwarf, which are stars at the end of the main sequence, with low temperatures, low luminosites and sizes similar to Jupiter. It is spinning at a rotational velocity of 4.8 km/s and has a projected rotational period of 1.34 days.[4]
The stellar radius, computed using the Stefan–Boltzmann law, is 0.134 R☉ (93,000 kilometres).[4] This makes SPECULOOS-3 the second-smallest star known to host a transiting planet, just marginally larger than TRAPPIST-1,[4] and its size is similar to that of Jupiter.[9] Its apparent magnitude is estimated at 17.8,[3] which is too faint to be seen by the naked eye.
It was first discovered in 2005 as part of the LSPM-North catalog, whose objective was to map stars in the northern celestial hemisphere with proper motions larger than 0.15" per year and apparent magnitudes smaller than 21m.[3] Its trignometric parallax was first measured in 2014 at 67.5±1.7 mas, translating into a distance of 14.8 parsecs (48.27 ly).[6] Gaia Data Release 3 (2023) published a parallax of 59.7 milliarcseconds, translating into a distance of 16.75 parsecs (54.6 ly).[2] This make this star relatively close to Earth.[10]
Red dwarf stars such as SPECULOOS-3 are the most numerous type of stars, making up 70% of all stars in the Milky Way galaxy. They are expected to live 10 times more than the Sun, with lifespans longer than 100 billion years.[10]
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Planetary system
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SPECULOOS-3 hosts one exoplanet, discovered in 2024 via the transit method.[11] Named SPECULOOS-3 b, it is an Earth-sized exoplanet that has a radius similar to that of Earth, equivalent to 0.98 Earth radii.[4] It takes only about 17 hours to complete an orbit around SPECULOOS-3, and, because of that proximity, it receives very high levels of radiation and is likely tidally locked, meaning that one side of the planet always faces its host star.[9] Its discovery was made using the SPECULOOS project, and was announced on 15 May 2024 in the academic journal Nature Astronomy.[12]
The mass of SPECULOOS-3 b has been not measured,[4] but it has been estimated by NASA's Eyes on Exoplanets at 0.894 M🜨.[13] Its equilibrium temperature is about 553 K (280 °C; 536 °F), meaning that its dayside is likely formed by solid rock.[4] The planet is an optimal target for characterization with the James Webb Space Telescope, giving more information about the planet's mineralogy[12] and the possibility of hosting an atmosphere.[14]
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References
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