A Disk Around the Planetary-Mass Companion GSC 06214-00210 b: Clues About the Formation of Gas Giants on Wide Orbits
Brendan P. Bowler, Michael C. Liu, Adam L. Kraus, Andrew W. Mann,, Michael J. Ireland

TL;DR
This study presents spectroscopic evidence of a circumplanetary disk around a planetary-mass companion, providing insights into its formation and challenging the planet-planet scattering hypothesis for wide-orbit gas giants.
Contribution
It reports the detection of a disk around GSC 06214-00210 b and discusses implications for formation mechanisms of wide-orbit gas giants.
Findings
Detection of strong PaBeta emission indicating a circumplanetary disk
Mass estimate of 14 +/- 2 Jupiter masses for the companion
Evidence suggesting formation without planet-planet scattering
Abstract
We present Keck/OSIRIS 1.1-1.8 um adaptive optics integral field spectroscopy of the planetary-mass companion to GSC 06214-00210, a member of the ~5 Myr Upper Scorpius OB association. We infer a spectral type of L0+/-1, and our spectrum exhibits multiple signs of youth. The most notable feature is exceptionally strong PaBeta emission (EW=-11.4 +/- 0.3 A) which signals the presence of a circumplanetary accretion disk. The luminosity of GSC 06214-00210 b combined with its age yields a model-dependent mass of 14 +/- 2 MJup, making it the lowest-mass companion to show evidence of a disk. With a projected separation of 320 AU, the formation of GSC 06214-00210 b and other very low-mass companions on similarly wide orbits is unclear. One proposed mechanism is formation at close separations followed by planet-planet scattering to much larger orbits. Since that scenario involves a close…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
