The International Deep Planet Survey II: The frequency of directly imaged giant exoplanets with stellar mass
Raphael Galicher, Christian Marois, Bruce Macintosh, Ben Zuckerman,, Travis Barman, Quinn Konopacky, Inseok Song, Jenny Patience, David, Lafreniere, Rene Doyon, Eric L. Nielsen

TL;DR
This study used a comprehensive direct imaging survey of 292 young stars over 14 years to estimate the frequency of giant exoplanets at large orbital distances, finding it to be lower than previous estimates.
Contribution
It developed a uniform data processing pipeline for multiple telescopes and provided new statistical constraints on giant planet occurrence at wide separations.
Findings
Approximately 1.05% of stars host a giant planet between 20-300 AU.
The frequency estimate varies significantly with assumptions about planet distribution.
No dependence of giant planet frequency on stellar mass was observed.
Abstract
Radial velocity and transit methods are effective for the study of short orbital period exoplanets but they hardly probe objects at large separations for which direct imaging can be used. We carried out the international deep planet survey of 292 young nearby stars to search for giant exoplanets and determine their frequency. We developed a pipeline for a uniform processing of all the data that we have recorded with NIRC2/Keck II, NIRI/Gemini North, NICI/Gemini South, and NACO/VLT for 14 years. The pipeline first applies cosmetic corrections and then reduces the speckle intensity to enhance the contrast in the images. The main result of the international deep planet survey is the discovery of the HR 8799 exoplanets. We also detected 59 visual multiple systems including 16 new binary stars and 2 new triple stellar systems, as well as 2,279 point-like sources. We used Monte Carlo…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
