'55 Cancri' (abbreviated 55 Cnc) is a
binary star located around 40
light-years away in the constellation
Cancer. It has the
Bayer designation 'Rho
1 Cancri'. The system contains a
yellow dwarf star (55 Cancri A) similar to our
Sun and a
red dwarf (55 Cancri B). The two components are separated by over 1000 times the distance from the
Earth to the Sun.
As of 2004, four
extrasolar planets are known in orbit around 55 Cancri A. Three of the planets are comparable to
Jupiter in mass, while the innermost planet has a mass similar to that of
Neptune. The 55 Cancri system was the first known four-planet extrasolar
planetary system.
55 Cancri A is ranked 63rd in the list of top 100 target stars for the
NASA Terrestrial Planet Finder mission.
[1]
(Note: "55 Cancri" is seen more often than "Rho
1 Cancri", although the Bayer designation is used by those who feel that they trump
Flamsteed numbers in preference. As a matter of fact, they usually do --
Tau Bootis is almost never called "4 Bootis" -- but in this case the superscript in "Rho
1" makes the Bayer designation rather cumbersome to use, making "55 Cancri" the more commonly-used name for the star.)
Distance and visibility
The 55 Cancri system is located fairly close to our
solar system: the
Hipparcos astrometry satellite measured the
parallax of 55 Cancri A as 79.80
milliarcseconds, corresponding to a distance of 12.5
parsecs.
[2] 55 Cancri A has an
apparent magnitude of 5.95, making it visible through
binoculars. It is just visible to the
naked eye under very dark skies. The red dwarf 55 Cancri B is of the 13th magnitude and only visible through a
telescope.
System components
55 Cancri A is a yellow dwarf star of spectral type G8V. It is bigger in diameter but is slightly less massive than our Sun, but is cooler and less
luminous. The star is more enriched than our sun in elements heavier than
helium: it is classified as a rare "super
metal-rich"
main sequence star and has around 186% the solar abundance of
iron.
[3] This abundance of metal makes estimating the star's age and mass difficult, as
evolutionary models are less well defined for such stars. One estimate based on
chromospheric activity suggests an age of around 5,500 million
years.
[4]
55 Cancri B is a red dwarf star located at an estimated distance of 1065
AU from the primary star,
[5] and is much less massive and luminous than our Sun. There are indications that this star may itself be a double star, though this is by no means certain.
[6]
Planetary system

Comparison of the orbits of the inner planets of 55 Cancri (black) with the planets of our solar system.
In
1997, the discovery of a
51 Pegasi-like planet
orbiting 55 Cancri A was announced, together with the planet of
Tau Boötis and the inner planet of
Upsilon Andromedae.
[7] The planet was discovered by measuring the star's
radial velocity, which showed a periodicity of around 14.7
days corresponding to a planet at least 78% of the mass of
Jupiter. This planet was designated
55 Cancri b, though to distinguish it from the star 55 Cancri B it is occasionally referred to as 55 Cancri Ab. The radial velocity measurements still showed a drift unaccounted-for by this planet, which could be explained by the
gravitational influence of a more distant object.
In
1998 the discovery of a possible dust disk around 55 Cancri A was announced.
[8] Calculations gave the disk radius at least 40 AU, similar to the
Kuiper belt in our solar system, with an inclination of 25° with respect to the plane of the sky. However, the discovery could not be verified and was later deemed to be spurious, caused instead by background radiation.
[9]

Our
solar system compared with the solar system of 55 Cancri
After making further radial velocity measurements, a planet orbiting at a distance of around 5 AU was announced in
2002.
3 This planet received the designation
55 Cancri d. At the time of discovery, the planet was thought to be in an orbit of mild
eccentricity (close to 0.1), however this value was increased by later measurements. Even after accounting for these two planets, a periodicity at 43 days remained, possibly due to a third planet. Measurements of the star suggested that this was close to the star's rotation period, which raised the possibility that the 43-day signal was caused by stellar activity. This possible planet received the designation
55 Cancri c.
In
2004 a
Neptune-mass planet designated
55 Cancri e was announced in a 2.8-day orbit.
[10] This planet may either be a small
gas giant or a large
terrestrial planet. The measurements that led to the discovery of this planet also confirmed the existence of 55 Cancri c. In addition, astrometric measurements made by the
Hubble Space Telescope led to an estimate of the
inclination of the orbit of the outer planet: around 53° with respect to the plane of the sky. Assuming the system is
coplanar, this means the true masses of the planets are around 25% greater than the lower limits measured by the radial velocity method.

55 Cnc planets
In
2005 the existence of planet e was questioned by
Jack Wisdom in a reanalysis of the data.
[11] According to him, instead of the 2.8-day planet there is a planet with a mass similar to that of Neptune in a 261-day orbit (corresponding to 0.77 AU in distance). This analysis has not been confirmed.
Without taking the unconfirmed 261-day planet into account, simulations suggest that there is a wide stable region between the orbits of planets c and d which could contain additional planets. Models predict that one or more terrestrial planets could form in this gap,
[12] though such planets would be undetectable with present-day technology. This is of
astrobiological interest since this region includes 55 Cancri A's
habitable zone.
See also
★
List of stars with confirmed extrasolar planets
★
Mu Arae
★
PSR 1257+12
References
1. TPF-C Top 100
2. HIP 43587
3. A planet at 5 AU Around 55 Cancri, Marcy, G. et al., , , The Astrophysical Journal, 2002
4. On the Ages of Exoplanet Host Stars, Saffe, C. et al., , , Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2005
5. Planets in Binaries, Eggenberger, A. et al., , , Scientific Frontiers in Research on Extrasolar Planets, 2003
6. Two Suns in The Sky: Stellar Multiplicity in Exoplanet Systems, Raghavan, D. et al., , , The Astrophysical Journal (accepted), 2006
7. Three New 51 Pegasi-Type Planets, Butler, R. et al., , , The Astrophysical Journal, 1997
8. A circumstellar dust disk around a star with a known planetary companion, Trilling, D., Brown. R, , , Nature, 1998
9. NICMOS Coronagraphic Observations of 55 Cancri, Schneider, G. et al., , , The Astronomical Journal, 2001
10. Detection of a NEPTUNE-mass planet in the ρ1 Cnc system using the Hobby-Eberly Telescope, McArthur, B. et al., , , The Astrophysical Journal, 2004
11. Evidence of a Neptune-Sized Planet in the ρ1 Cancri System, Wisdom, J., , , The Astrophysical Journal Letters (submitted), 2005
12. Predicting Planets in Known Extra-Solar Planetary Systems III: Forming Terrestrial Planets, Raymond, S. et al., , , The Astrophysical Journal, 2006
External links
★
'SIMBAD': HD 75732 -- High proper-motion Star
★
'SIMBAD': HD 75732B -- High proper-motion Star
★
'The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia': Notes for star 55 Cnc
★
'SolStation': 55 Cancri 2
★
'Extrasolar Visions': 55 Cancri
★
55 Cancri from The Planet Project at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
★
Astronomers searching for distant Earths find two Neptunes