VLT/NACO Deep imaging survey of young, nearby austral stars
G. Chauvin, A.-M. Lagrange, M. Bonavita, B. Zuckerman, C. Dumas, M. S., Bessell, J.-L. Beuzit, M. Bonnefoy, S. Desidera, J. Farihi, P. Lowrance, D., Mouillet, I. Song

TL;DR
This survey used VLT/NACO adaptive optics to image 88 young, nearby stars, discovering new multiple systems and constraining the properties of giant planets at intermediate separations.
Contribution
It is the largest deep imaging survey of young, nearby southern hemisphere stars, discovering new systems and providing statistical constraints on giant planet properties.
Findings
Discovered 17 new close multiple systems.
Identified candidate substellar companions and confirmed some previously known.
Placed constraints on giant planet occurrence between 20 and 150 AU.
Abstract
Since November 2002, we have conducted the largest deep imaging survey of the young, nearby associations of the southern hemisphere. Our goal is detection and characterization of substellar companions at intermediate (10--500 AU) physical separations. We have observed a sample of 88 stars, mostly G to M dwarfs, that we essentially identify as younger than 100 Myr and closer to Earth than 100 pc. The VLT/NACO adaptive optics instrument of the ESO Paranal Observatory was used to explore the faint circumstellar environment between typically 0.1 and 10''. We report the discovery of 17 new close (0.1-5.0'') multiple systems. HIP108195AB and C (F1III-M6), HIP84642AB (a~14 AU, K0-M5) and TWA22AB (a~1.8 AU; M6-M6) confirmed comoving systems. TWA22AB is likely to be a astrometric calibrator that can be used to test evolutionary predictions. Among our complete sample, a total of 65 targets…
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