Discovery of a low-mass companion inside the debris ring surrounding the F5V star HD206893
Julien Milli, Pascale Hibon, Valentin Christiaens, Elodie Choquet,, Mickael Bonnefoy, Grant M. Kennedy, Mark C. Wyatt, Olivier Absil, Carlos A., Gomez Gonzalez, Carlos del Burgo, Luca Matra, Jean-Charles Augereau, Anthony, Boccaletti, Christian Delacroix, Steve Ertel

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a low-mass companion within the debris ring of star HD206893, providing insights into planetary system formation and evolution through high-contrast imaging observations.
Contribution
First detection of a low-mass companion inside a debris disc around HD206893 using high-contrast imaging, expanding knowledge of planet formation.
Findings
Detected a companion at 10 au with 24-73 Mjup mass.
Confirmed the companion with follow-up observations, ruling out background objects.
Observed extended disc emission consistent with scattered light.
Abstract
Uncovering the ingredients and the architecture of planetary systems is a very active field of research that has fuelled many new theories on giant planet formation, migration, composition, and interaction with the circumstellar environment. We aim at discovering and studying new such systems, to further expand our knowledge of how low-mass companions form and evolve. We obtained high-contrast H-band images of the circumstellar environment of the F5V star HD206893, known to host a debris disc never detected in scattered light. These observations are part of the SPHERE High Angular Resolution Debris Disc Survey (SHARDDS) using the InfraRed Dual-band Imager and Spectrograph (IRDIS) installed on VLT/SPHERE. We report the detection of a source with a contrast of 3.6x10^{-5} in the H-band, orbiting at a projected separation of 270 milliarcsecond or 10 au, corresponding to a mass in the range…
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