Searching for sub-stellar companion into the LkCa15 proto-planetary disk
M. Bonavita, G. Chauvin, A. Boccaletti, V. Pietu, P. Baudoz, J. L., Beuzit, A. Dutrey, S. Guilloteau, A. M. Lagrange, D. Mouillet, and G., Niccolini

TL;DR
This study used high-contrast imaging to search for a potential sub-stellar companion in the LkCa15 disk, constraining its possible properties but not confirming its presence.
Contribution
It applied advanced adaptive optics imaging to set new limits on the mass and orbit of a suspected companion in the LkCa15 disk.
Findings
No direct detection of the companion was made.
Companions with M >= 6 M Jup at >= 100 AU are excluded.
Brown dwarf companions within 80 AU are unlikely.
Abstract
Recent sub-millimetric observations at the Plateau de Bure interferometer evidenced a cavity at ~ 46 AU in radius into the proto-planetary disk around the T Tauri star LkCa15 (V1079 Tau), located in the Taurus molecular cloud. Additional Spitzer observations have corroborated this result possibly explained by the presence of a massive (>= 5 MJup) planetary mass, a brown dwarf or a low mass star companion at about 30 AU from the star. We used the most recent developments of high angular resolution and high contrast imaging to search directly for the existence of this putative companion, and to bring new constraints on its physical and orbital properties. The NACO adaptive optics instrument at VLT was used to observe LkCa15 using a four quadrant phase mask coronagraph to access small angular separations at relatively high contrast. A reference star at the same parallactic angle was…
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