A survey of young, nearby, and dusty stars to understand the formation of wide-orbit giant planets
J. Rameau, G. Chauvin, A.-M. Lagrange, H. Klahr, M. Bonnefoy, C., Mordasini, M. Bonavita, S. Desidera, C. Dumas, and J. H. Girard

TL;DR
This survey of 59 young, nearby stars using VLT/NaCo aimed to detect wide-orbit giant planets and brown dwarfs, providing statistical constraints on their occurrence and insights into their formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It offers the first statistical analysis of wide-orbit giant planets around young stars and evaluates formation models like gravitational instability and core accretion.
Findings
Occurrence rate of 10.8-24.8% for giant planets at wide orbits.
No new substellar companions detected in the survey.
Constraints on formation models, favoring massive clumps for gravitational instability.
Abstract
Direct imaging has confirmed the existence of substellar companions on wide orbits. To understand the formation and evolution mechanisms of these companions, the full population properties must be characterized. We aim at detecting giant planet and/or brown dwarf companions around young, nearby, and dusty stars. Our goal is also to provide statistics on the population of giant planets at wide-orbits and discuss planet formation models. We report a deep survey of 59 stars, members of young stellar associations. The observations were conducted with VLT/NaCo at L'-band (3.8 micron). We used angular differential imaging to reach optimal detection performance. A statistical analysis of about 60 % of the young and southern A-F stars closer than 65 pc allows us to derive the fraction of giant planets on wide orbits. We use gravitational instability models and planet population synthesis models…
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