LkCa 15: A Young Exoplanet Caught at Formation?
Adam L. Kraus (Univ. of Hawaii - IfA), Michael J. Ireland (Macquarie, University)

TL;DR
This paper reports the direct imaging discovery of a likely young (proto)planet around LkCa 15, providing evidence that some transitional disks host forming exoplanets and offering insights into gas giant formation.
Contribution
First direct imaging detection of a (proto)planet in a young transitional disk, revealing a system in the process of planet formation.
Findings
Likely (proto)planet around LkCa 15 with estimated mass ~6 M_{Jup}
Detection of circumplanetary material indicating ongoing assembly
Projected orbital radii consistent with the disk gap, suggesting planet formation activity
Abstract
Young and directly imaged exoplanets offer critical tests of planet-formation models that are not matched by RV surveys of mature stars. These targets have been extremely elusive to date, with no exoplanets younger than 10--20 Myr and only a handful of direct-imaged exoplanets at all ages. We report the direct imaging discovery of a likely (proto)planet around the young (~2 Myr) solar analog LkCa 15, located inside a known gap in the protoplanetary disk (a "transitional disk"). Our observations use non-redundant aperture masking interferometry at 3 epochs to reveal a faint and relatively blue point source ($M_K'=9.1+/-0.2, K'-L'=0.98+/-0.22), flanked by approximately co-orbital emission that is red and resolved into at least two sources (M_L'=7.5+/-0.2, K'-L'=2.7+/-0.3; M_L'=7.4+/-0.2, K'-L'=1.94+/-0.16). We propose that the most likely geometry consists of a newly-formed (proto)planet…
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