Direct imaging of extra-solar planets in star forming regions: Lessons learned from a false positive around IM Lup
Dimitri Mawet, Olivier Absil, Guillaume Montagnier, Pierre Riaud, Jean, Surdej, Christine Ducourant, Jean-Charles Augereau, Sarah Rottinger, Julien, Girard, John Krist, Karl Stapelfeldt

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges and lessons learned from direct imaging attempts of exoplanets around young, distant stars like IM Lup, highlighting the importance of precise measurements and perseverance, despite a false positive detection.
Contribution
It provides a detailed case study of a direct imaging survey around IM Lup, emphasizing the critical factors for successful exoplanet detection in star forming regions and lessons from a false positive.
Findings
False positive background object identified around IM Lup
Best detection limits for IM Lup established
Insights into observational challenges in star forming regions
Abstract
Most exoplanet imagers consist of ground-based adaptive optics coronagraphic cameras which are currently limited in contrast, sensitivity and astrometric precision, but advantageously observe in the near-IR (1- 5{\mu}m). Because of these practical limitations, our current observational aim at detecting and characterizing planets puts heavy constraints on target selection, observing strategies, data reduction, and follow-up. Most surveys so far have thus targeted young systems (1-100Myr) to catch the putative remnant thermal radiation of giant planets, which peaks in the near-IR. They also favor systems in the solar neighborhood (d<80pc), which eases angular resolution requirements but also ensures a good knowledge of the distance and proper motion, which are critical to secure the planet status, and enable subsequent characterization. Because of their youth, it is very tempting to…
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