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We perform a detailed characterization of the planetary system orbiting the bright, nearby M dwarf Gliese 411 using radial velocities gathered by APF, HIRES, SOPHIE, and CARMENES. We confirm the presence of a signal with a period near $2900$ days that has been disputed as either a planet or long-period stellar magnetic cycle. An analysis of activity metrics including $mathrm{H_alpha}$ and $mathrm{logR_{HK}}$ indices supports the interpretation that the signal corresponds to a Neptune-mass planet, GJ 411 c. An additional signal near $215$ days was previously dismissed as an instrumental systematic, but our analysis shows that a planetary origin cannot be ruled out. With a semi-major axis of $0.5141pm0.0038$ AU, this candidates orbit falls between those of its companions and skirts the outer edge of the habitable zone. It has a minimum mass of $4.1pm0.6$ $M_oplus$, giving a radial velocity amplitude of $0.83pm0.12$ $mathrm{m,s^{-1}}$. If confirmed, this would be one of the lowest-amplitude planet detections from any of these four instruments. Our analysis of the joint radial velocity data set also provides tighter constraints on the orbital parameters for the previously known planets. Photometric data from $it{TESS}$ does not show any signs of a transit event. However, the outermost planet and candidate are prime targets for future direct imaging missions and GJ 411 c may be detectable via astrometry.
A 4MJ planet with a 15.8day orbital period has been detected from very precise radial velocity measurements with the CORALIE echelle spectrograph. A second remote and more massive companion has also been detected. All the planetary companions so far
We re-analyse the recently published HARPS and PFS velocities of the nearby K dwarf GJ 221 that have been reported to contain the signatures of two planets orbiting the star. Our goal is to see whether the earlier studies discussing the system fell v
We report detections of new exoplanets from a radial velocity (RV) survey of metal-rich FGK stars by using three telescopes. By optimizing our RV analysis method to long time-baseline observations, we have succeeded in detecting five new Jovian-plane
We present an update to seven stars with long-period planets or planetary candidates using new and archival radial velocities from Keck-HIRES and literature velocities from other telescopes. Our updated analysis better constrains orbital parameters f
The coherent low-frequency radio emission detected by LOFAR from Gliese 1151, a quiescent M4.5 dwarf star, has radio emission properties consistent with theoretical expectations of star-planet interactions for an Earth-sized planet on a 1-5 day orbit