Following decades of disproven claims, four small exoplanets have been confirmed to orbit Barnard’s Star, the second-closest star system to Earth after Alpha Centauri.
System Under Scrutiny

Illustration of the nearest star systems to Earth. Barnard’s Star is the nearest single star and second-nearest star system; the triple-star Alpha Centauri system is closer. The remaining two systems shown here contain brown dwarfs. [NASA/Penn State University]
Now, the white whale appears to have been caught at last. Just last November, researchers reported the discovery of a planet orbiting Barnard’s Star with a period of 3.154 days. The data hinted at the presence of three other planets, but these candidates could not be confirmed. In a new research article published today, Ritvik Basant (University of Chicago) and collaborators leveraged years of data to confirm that Barnard’s Star hosts not just one, but four planets.
Continuing the Search
The team observed Barnard’s Star from 2021 to 2023 with the M dwarf Advanced Radial velocity Observer Of Neighboring eXoplanets (MAROON-X), a spectrograph tailored to the properties of M dwarfs. Basant and coauthors searched the MAROON-X data for subtle shifts in spectral lines indicating the change in the star’s radial velocity from planets tugging on the star as they orbit.

Phase-folded fits to the MAROON-X data from this work (red triangles) and the data from other authors (beige and gray squares). Click to enlarge. [Adapted from Basant et al. 2025]
After removing the signals from the three confirmed planets, a tiny amount of signal remained at the period of the planet candidate e — but not enough to confirm its presence. To investigate further, Basant’s team jointly modeled their MAROON-X data with the data that led to the discovery of Barnard b last November. This improved the statistics and strengthened the evidence for planet e, confirming its existence.
More to Learn
Ultimately, Basant’s team confirmed the presence of four planets with minimum masses between 19% and 34% of Earth’s mass. Barnard e is possibly the lowest-mass planet to be detected using the radial-velocity method.

Compactness of the Barnard’s Star system compared to other compact M-dwarf planetary systems. Click to enlarge. [Adapted from Basant et al. 2025]
Now, for the million-dollar question: could any of these planets be habitable? None of the newly discovered planets lie within Barnard’s Star’s habitable zone, which spans orbital periods from 10 to 42 days. The current data also rule out the presence of habitable-zone planets with masses greater than 0.57 Earth mass, though smaller planets are still possible.
Citation
“Four Sub-Earth Planets Orbiting Barnard’s Star from MAROON-X and ESPRESSO,” Ritvik Basant et al 2025 ApJL 982 L1. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/adb8d5