4.6 Article

LIStEN: L′ band Imaging Survey for Exoplanets in the North

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 645, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202039541

Keywords

planet-disk interactions; instrumentation: high angular resolution; infrared: planetary systems; techniques: high angular resolution

Funding

  1. Royal Society
  2. European Research Council under the Horizon 2020 Framework Program via the ERC Advanced Grant [Origins 83 24 28]
  3. DFG [Kr 2164/14-2, Kr 2164/152]

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The researchers conducted a survey called LIStEN targeting 28 nearby stars to detect new companions and study their interactions with discs, but no new companions were found. By combining mass detection limits with disc characteristics and proper motion information, they constrained the presence of unseen planetary and low-mass stellar companions around the 24 disc-hosting stars in the survey.
Context. Planetary systems and debris discs are natural by-products of the star formation process, and they affect each other. The direct imaging technique allows simultaneous imaging of both a companion and the circumstellar disc it resides in, and is thus a valuable tool to study companion-disc interactions. However, the number of systems in which a companion and a disc have been detected at the same time remains low.Aims. Our aim is to increase this sample, and to continue detecting and studying the population of giant planets in wide orbits.Methods. We carry out the L band Imaging Survey for Exoplanets in the North (LIStEN), which targeted 28 nearby stars: 24 are known to harbour a debris disc (DD) and the remaining 4 are protoplanetary disc-hosting stars. We aim to detect possible new companions, and study the interactions between the companion and their discs. Angular differential imaging observations were carried out in the L band at 3.8 mu m using the LMIRCam instrument at the LBT, between October 2017 and April 2019.Results. No new companions were detected. We combined the derived mass detection limits with information on the disc, and on the proper motion of the host star, to constrain the presence of unseen planetary and low-mass stellar companion around the 24 disc-hosting stars in our survey. We find that 2 have an uncertain DD status and the remaining 22 have disc sizes compatible with self-stirring. Three targets show a proper motion anomaly (PMa) compatible with the presence of an unseen companion.Conclusions. Our achieved mass limits combined with the PMa analysis for HD 113337 support the presence of a second companion around the star, as suggested in previous RV studies. Our mass limits also help to tighten the constraints on the mass and semi-major axis of the unseen companions around HD 161868 and HD 8907.

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