A Blind Search for Magnetospheric Emissions from Planetary Companions to Nearby Solar-type Stars
T. Joseph W. Lazio (1, 2), S. Carmichael (3), J. Clark (3), E., Elkins (3), P. Gudmundsen (3), Z. Mott (3), M. Szwajkowski (3), L. A. Hennig, (3) ((1) NRL, (2) NLSI, (3) TJHSST)

TL;DR
This study conducted a blind search for magnetospheric emissions from planets around nearby young stars using low-frequency radio surveys, setting upper limits and discussing future detection prospects with advanced instruments.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical constraints on planetary magnetospheric emissions around nearby stars and estimates the potential detectability with future radio telescopes.
Findings
Established upper limits on planetary radio luminosities between 10 and 33 mJy.
Found stellar wind energies in the sample are 15-50 times solar, enhancing emission prospects.
Future instruments could improve detection sensitivity by factors of 10-100.
Abstract
This paper reports a blind search for magnetospheric emissions from planets around nearby stars. Young stars are likely to have much stronger stellar winds than the Sun, and because planetary magnetospheric emissions are powered by stellar winds, stronger stellar winds may enhance the radio luminosity of any orbiting planets. Using various stellar catalogs, we selected nearby stars (<~ 30 pc) with relatively young age estimates (< 3 Gyr). We constructed different samples from the stellar catalogs, finding between 100 and several hundred stars. We stacked images from the 74-MHz (4-m wavelength) VLA Low-frequency Sky Survey (VLSS), obtaining 3\sigma limits on planetary emission in the stacked images of between 10 and 33 mJy. These flux density limits correspond to average planetary luminosities less than 5--10 x 10^{23} erg/s. Using recent models for the scaling of stellar wind velocity,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
