Constraining the orbit of the possible companion to Beta Pictoris: New deep imaging observations
Anne-Marie Lagrange (LAOG), Markus Kasper (ESO), Anthony Boccaletti, (LESIA), Ga\"el Chauvin (LAOG), Damien Gratadour (LESIA), Thierry Fusco,, David Ehrenreich (LAOG), Daniel Apai (STSci), David Mouillet (LAOG), Daniel, Rouan (LESIA)

TL;DR
This study used deep imaging observations over five years to constrain the orbit of a potential planetary companion to Beta Pictoris, providing insights into its nature and orbital dynamics.
Contribution
It offers the first multi-epoch imaging analysis to constrain the orbit of a candidate exoplanet around Beta Pictoris, refining its possible orbital parameters.
Findings
No detection of the companion in 2009 data at 6.5 AU
Supports the hypothesis of a bound companion moving closer since 2003
Places strong constraints on the companion's possible orbit
Abstract
We recently reported on the detection of a possible planetary-mass companion to Beta Pictoris at a projected separation of 8 AU from the star, using data taken in November 2003 with NaCo, the adaptive-optics system installed on the Very Large Telescope UT4. Eventhough no second epoch detection was available, there are strong arguments to favor a gravitationally bound companion rather than a background object. If confirmed and located at a physical separation of 8 AU, this young, hot (~1500 K), massive Jovian companion (~8 Mjup) would be the closest planet to its star ever imaged, could be formed via core-accretion, and could explain the main morphological and dynamical properties of the dust disk. Our goal was to return to Beta Pic five years later to obtain a second-epoch observation of the companion or, in case of a non-detection, constrain its orbit. Deep adaptive-optics L'-band…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
