The Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign: The Frequency of Giant Planets Around Debris Disk Stars
Zahed Wahhaj, Michael C. Liu, Eric L. Nielsen, Beth A. Biller, Thomas, L. Hayward, Laird M. Close, Jared R. Males, Andrew Skemer, Christ Ftaclas,, Mark Chun, Niranjan Thatte, Matthias Tecza, Evgenya L. Shkolnik, Marc, Kuchner, I. Neill Reid, Elisabete M. de Gouveia Dal Pino

TL;DR
This study used high-contrast imaging to survey 57 debris disk stars for giant planets, developing a Bayesian model to constrain planet populations, finding that few stars host massive planets at large separations.
Contribution
Introduces a new Bayesian formalism for analyzing direct imaging data, incorporating non-detections and multiple planet scenarios, to statistically constrain giant planet populations.
Findings
Less than 13% of debris disk stars have >5MJup planets beyond 80 AU.
Less than 21% have >3MJup planets outside 40 AU.
Planets with >3MJup at >10 AU are rare, less than 20% of debris disk stars.
Abstract
We have completed a high-contrast direct imaging survey for giant planets around 57 debris disk stars as part of the Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign. We achieved median H-band contrasts of 12.4 mag at 0.5" and 14.1 mag at 1" separation. Follow-up observations of the 66 candidates with projected separation < 500 AU show that all of them are background objects. To establish statistical constraints on the underlying giant planet population based on our imaging data, we have developed a new Bayesian formalism that incorporates (1) non-detections, (2) single-epoch candidates, (3) astrometric and (4) photometric information, and (5) the possibility of multiple planets per star to constrain the planet population. Our formalism allows us to include in our analysis the previously known Beta Pictoris and the HR 8799 planets. Our results show at 95% confidence that <13% of debris disk stars…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology · Planetary Science and Exploration
