The HARPS search for low-mass extrasolar planets has been ongoing for more than 4 years, targeting originally about 400 bright FGK dwarfs in the solar neighbourhood. The published low-mass planetary systems coming from this survey are fully confirmed by subsequent observations, which demonstrate the sub-m/s long-term stability reached by HARPS. The complex RV curves of these systems have led us to focus on a smaller sample of stars, accumulating more data points per star. We perform a global search in our data to assess the existence of the large population of ice giants and super-Earths predicted by numerical simulations of planet formation. We indeed detect about 45 candidates having minimum masses below 30 M⊕ and orbital periods below 50 days. These numbers are preliminary since the existence of these objects has to be confirmed by subsequent observations. However, they indicate that about 30% of solar-type stars may have such close-in, low-mass planets. Some emerging properties of this low-mass population are presented. We finally discuss the prospects for finding transiting objects among these candidates, which may possibly yield the first nearby, transiting super-Earth. © 2009 International Astronomical Union.
CITATION STYLE
Lovis, C., Mayor, M., Bouchy, F., Pepe, F., Queloz, D., Udry, S., … Mordasini, C. (2008). Towards the characterization of the hot Neptune/super-Earth population around nearby bright stars. In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 4, pp. 502–505). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921308027051
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.