High Contrast Imaging of the Close Environment of HD 142527 -
J. Rameau, G. Chauvin, A.-M. Lagrange, P. Thebault, J. Milli, J. H., Girard, and M. Bonnefoy

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution thermal imaging to explore the environment of HD 142527, revealing complex disk structures and placing strict limits on the presence of planetary companions within its large circumstellar disk.
Contribution
First deep thermal imaging at 3.8 microns of HD 142527's environment, revealing detailed disk asymmetries and constraining potential planetary companions.
Findings
Revealed complex asymmetrical disk structures including spiral arms.
Confirmed an inner cavity down to 30 AU.
Placed stringent limits on the presence of massive planets beyond 50 AU.
Abstract
Context. It has long been suggested that circumstellar disks surrounding young stars may be the signposts of planets, and still more since the recent discoveries of embedded substellar companions. The planet-disk interaction may create, according to models, large structures, gaps, rings or spirals, in the disk. In that sense, the Herbig star HD 142527 is particularly compelling as, its massive disk displays intriguing asymmetries that suggest the existence of a dynamical peturber of unknown nature. Aims. Our goal was to obtain deep thermal images of the close circumstellar environment of HD 142527 to re-image the reported close-in structures (cavity, spiral arms) of the disk and to search for stellar and substellar companions that could be connected to their presence. Results. The circumstellar environment of HD 142527 is revealed at an unprecedented spatial resolution down to the sub…
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