Pi Mensae


Pi Mensae, also known as HD 39091, is a yellow dwarf star in the constellation of Mensa. This star has a high proper motion. The apparent magnitude is 5.67, which can be visible to the naked eye in exceptionally dark, clear skies. It is nearly 60 ly away. The star is slightly larger than the Sun in terms of mass, size, luminosity, temperature, and metallicity and is about 730 million years younger. It hosts two planets.

Planetary system

On October 15, 2001, an extrasolar planet was found orbiting the star. Pi Mensae b is one of the most massive planets ever discovered, and has a very eccentric orbit that takes approximately 2,151 days to complete. Because of its eccentricity, and being a massive brown dwarf that passes through the habitable zone, it would have disrupted the orbits of any Earth-like planets, and possibly thrown them into the star, or out into the interstellar medium.
Incorporating more accurate Hipparcos data yields a mass range for the companion to be anywhere from 10.27 to 29.9 times that of Jupiter, confirming its substellar nature with the upper limit of mass putting it in the brown dwarf range.
The companion b was confirmed to be a brown dwarf with the accurate mass measurement in 2020. Pi Mensae was ranked 100th on the list of top 100 target stars for the planned Terrestrial Planet Finder mission to search for Earth-like planets.
On September 16, 2018, a preprint was posted to arXiv detailing the discovery of a super-Earth on a 6.27-day orbit around the star, the first exoplanet detection by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite submitted for publication.. This was confirmed two days latter by
where the attention was called that the system is amenable for future planet atmospheric studies.
In 2020, an analysis with Gaia DR2 and Hipparcos astrometry showed that planets b and c are located on orbits mutually inclined by 49°-131°, which causes planet c to not transit most of the time, and acquire large misalignments with its host star's spin axis.
The c is likely formed on wide orbit, and then migrated inward under gravitational influence of the brown dwarf b.