Discovery of a warm, dusty giant planet around HIP65426
G. Chauvin, S. Desidera, A.-M. Lagrange, A. Vigan, R. Gratton, M., Langlois, M. Bonnefoy, J.-L. Beuzit, M. Feldt, D. Mouillet, M. Meyer, A., Cheetham, B. Biller, A. Boccaletti, V. D'Orazi, R. Galicher, J. Hagelberg,, A.-L. Maire, D. Mesa, J. Olofsson, M. Samland, T.O.B. Schmidt

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and characterization of a warm, dusty giant exoplanet around HIP65426 using high-contrast imaging, providing insights into its atmosphere, mass, and implications for planet formation theories.
Contribution
First direct imaging detection of a warm, dusty giant planet around HIP65426, with detailed spectral analysis and atmospheric modeling to understand its properties.
Findings
Detected a faint companion at 92 au from HIP65426
Estimated planet mass between 6-12 Jupiter masses
Characterized atmosphere consistent with young, low-gravity L-type dwarfs
Abstract
The SHINE program is a large high-contrast near-infrared survey of 600 young, nearby stars. It is aimed at searching for and characterizing new planetary systems using VLT/SPHERE's unprecedented high-contrast and high-angular resolution imaging capabilities. It also intends at placing statistical constraints on the occurrence and orbital properties of the giant planet population at large orbits as a function of the stellar host mass and age to test planet formation theories. We use the IRDIS dual-band imager and the IFS integral field spectrograph of SPHERE to acquire high-constrast coronagraphic differential near-infrared images and spectra of the young A2 star HIP65426. It is a member of the ~17 Myr old Lower Centaurus-Crux association. At a separation of 830 mas (92 au projected) from the star, we detect a faint red companion. Multi-epoch observations confirm that it shares common…
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.
