Skip to main content

GJ 3473 c

Super Earth Canis Minor

GJ 3473 c is a super-Earth orbiting GJ 3473 in the constellation Canis Minor. It lies about 89 light-years from Earth and was discovered in 2020 using the radial velocity method.

7.4×Earth mass
16 dOrbital period
329 KEquilibrium temp.
0.61Earth similarity
89 lyDistance
2020Discovered

Is GJ 3473 c in the Habitable Zone?

GJ 3473 c orbits inside the inner edge of the habitable zone of GJ 3473. So close to its star, surface conditions are far too hot for liquid water.

GJ 3473 c
Too hot Optimistic habitable zone Conservative habitable zone Too cold

Habitable zone of GJ 3473: 0.100–0.262 AU (conservative: 0.127–0.249 AU), per Kopparapu et al. (2014). Earth orbits the Sun at 1 AU.

See the full interactive habitable-zone view in the Exoplanet Explorer app ›

Temperature on GJ 3473 c

The equilibrium temperature of GJ 3473 c is about 329 K (56 °C) — in a range broadly comparable to Earth, whose equilibrium temperature is 255 K. This estimate ignores any atmosphere, which could change surface temperatures dramatically — Earth's greenhouse effect adds about 33 °C. It receives 1.95 times the stellar energy that Earth gets from the Sun.

Orbit and Year Length

A year on GJ 3473 c — one full orbit around GJ 3473 — lasts 15.5 Earth days, shorter than Mercury's 88-day year. It orbits at an average distance of 0.088 AU — closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun.

How Was GJ 3473 c Discovered?

GJ 3473 c was discovered in 2020 using the radial velocity method, with observations from Multiple Observatories.

The radial velocity method measures the subtle wobble of a star caused by the gravitational pull of an orbiting planet, visible as periodic shifts in the star's light spectrum. The size of the wobble reveals the planet's minimum mass.

How Far Away Is GJ 3473 c?

GJ 3473 c is 89.3 light-years (27.4 parsecs) from Earth. Light arriving here tonight left the planet around the year 1937. A probe traveling at the speed of Voyager 1 — about 17 km/s, the fastest outbound spacecraft ever launched — would need roughly 1,571,680 years to make the journey.

Earth Similarity Index

The Earth Similarity Index (ESI) scores how physically similar a planet is to Earth, from 0 to 1, based on radius, density, escape velocity and surface temperature. GJ 3473 c scores 0.61, ranking #126 of 5,568 planets with a known ESI. For reference, Mars scores about 0.70.

The Host Star: GJ 3473

GJ 3473 c belongs to a system of 2 stars; it orbits GJ 3473.

GJ 3473

Surface temperature
3,347 K (Sun: 5,772 K)
Mass
0.36 M☉
Radius
0.36 R☉
Luminosity
0.0150 L☉

The GJ 3473 Planetary System

GJ 3473 c is one of 2 known planets in the GJ 3473 system. Its siblings:

GJ 3473 c — Complete Data

Mass (best estimate)7.41 Earth masses
Orbital period15.51 days
Orbital distance0.088 AU
Equilibrium temperature329 K (56 °C)
Stellar irradiation1.95× Earth
Earth Similarity Index0.61
Distance from Earth89.3 light-years (27.4 parsecs)
ConstellationCanis Minor
Discovery methodRadial Velocity
Discovery facilityMultiple Observatories
Discovery year2020

Data: NASA Exoplanet Archive, last updated 2020-10-16. Earth Similarity Index: PHL @ UPR Arecibo.

Frequently Asked Questions About GJ 3473 c

Is GJ 3473 c habitable?

No — GJ 3473 c orbits too close to its star and is too hot for liquid water to exist on its surface.

How far away is GJ 3473 c?

GJ 3473 c is about 89 light-years from Earth in the constellation Canis Minor. A spacecraft traveling as fast as Voyager 1 (about 17 km/s) would need roughly 1,571,680 years to get there.

How long is a year on GJ 3473 c?

One orbit around GJ 3473 takes 15.5 Earth days — short enough that 24 of its years would fit into one Earth year.

Exoplanet Explorer app icon

Explore GJ 3473 c in the app

Browse, filter and compare 6,000+ exoplanets on iPhone, iPad and Apple Watch — with habitable-zone views, widgets and offline data.

Download on the App Store