Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society
Proxima d is one of the lightest exoplanets known to date. It orbits its parent star at 0.029 AU, with a period of 5.12 days. It's induced RV semi-amplitude, of just 39 cm/s on a V-mag 11 star, highlights the capabilities of the ESPRESSO spectrograph, installed at the VLT telescope array of the Paranal observatory. The signal has an amplitude that is just 1/5 of the amplitude of the activity-induced radial velocity signal, which shows that, under the right conditions, current techniques can detect planetary signals much smaller than activity signals. The discovery of Proxima d opens the door to the characterization of the population of very low mass planets of the solar neighborhood. It shows that radial velocity studies are now capable of detecting exoplanets with masses similar to the Earth and much smaller.