Combining angular differential imaging and accurate polarimetry with SPHERE/IRDIS to characterize young giant exoplanets
Rob G. van Holstein, Frans Snik, Julien H. Girard, Jozua de Boer,, Christian Ginski, Christoph U. Keller, Daphne M. Stam, Jean-Luc Beuzit, David, Mouillet, Markus Kasper, Maud Langlois, Alice Zurlo, Remco J. de Kok, Arthur, Vigan

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel high-contrast imaging method combining angular differential imaging and polarimetry at VLT/SPHERE-IRDIS to characterize young giant exoplanets, aiming to detect their polarized light and infer atmospheric properties.
Contribution
The paper presents a new observational technique that integrates ADI and polarimetry with detailed calibration and data reduction strategies for exoplanet characterization.
Findings
No polarization detected in initial observations.
Achieved sub-percent polarimetric sensitivity and accuracy.
Preliminary upper limits on exoplanet polarization degrees.
Abstract
Young giant exoplanets emit infrared radiation that can be linearly polarized up to several percent. This linear polarization can trace: 1) the presence of atmospheric cloud and haze layers, 2) spatial structure, e.g. cloud bands and rotational flattening, 3) the spin axis orientation and 4) particle sizes and cloud top pressure. We introduce a novel high-contrast imaging scheme that combines angular differential imaging (ADI) and accurate near-infrared polarimetry to characterize self-luminous giant exoplanets. We implemented this technique at VLT/SPHERE-IRDIS and developed the corresponding observing strategies, the polarization calibration and the data-reduction approaches. By combining ADI and polarimetry we can characterize planets that can be directly imaged with a very high signal-to-noise ratio. We use the IRDIS pupil-tracking mode and combine ADI and principal component…
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