Magellan Adaptive Optics first-light observations of the exoplanet beta Pic b. II. 3-5 micron direct imaging with MagAO+Clio, and the empirical bolometric luminosity of a self-luminous giant planet
Katie M. Morzinski, Jared R. Males, Andy J. Skemer, Laird M. Close,, Phil M. Hinz, T. J. Rodigas, Alfio Puglisi, Simone Esposito, Armando, Riccardi, Enrico Pinna, Marco Xompero, Runa Briguglio, Vanessa P. Bailey,, Katherine B. Follette, Derek Kopon, Alycia J. Weinberger

TL;DR
This study presents new 3-5 micron direct imaging observations of the exoplanet beta Pic b, empirically determines its bolometric luminosity, and derives its fundamental physical properties using combined observational data and models.
Contribution
First-light MagAO+Clio observations at multiple wavelengths of beta Pic b, combined with literature data, to empirically determine its bolometric luminosity and physical characteristics.
Findings
Bolometric luminosity of log(L_bol/L_sun) = -3.78 ± 0.03.
Estimated mass of 12.7 ± 0.3 M_Jup, radius of 1.45 ± 0.02 R_Jup, and T_eff of 1708 ± 23 K.
Empirical luminosity aligns with atmospheric models but is brighter than field-dwarf corrections.
Abstract
Young giant exoplanets are a unique laboratory for understanding cool, low-gravity atmospheres. A quintessential example is the massive extrasolar planet Pic b, which is 9 AU from and embedded in the debris disk of the young nearby A6V star Pictoris. We observed the system with first light of the Magellan Adaptive Optics (MagAO) system. In Paper I we presented the first CCD detection of this planet with MagAO+VisAO. Here we present four MagAO+Clio images of Pic b at 3.1 m, 3.3 m, , and , including the first observation in the fundamental CH band. To remove systematic errors from the spectral energy distribution (SED), we re-calibrate the literature photometry and combine it with our own data, for a total of 22 independent measurements at 16 passbands from 0.99--4.8 m. Atmosphere models demonstrate the planet is cloudy but…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
