Medium-resolution integral-field spectroscopy for high-contrast exoplanet imaging: Molecule maps of the $\beta$ Pictoris system with SINFONI
H.J. Hoeijmakers, H. Schwarz, I.A.G. Snellen, R.J. de Kok, M., Bonnefoy, G. Chauvin, A.M. Lagrange, J.H. Girard

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that medium-resolution integral-field spectrographs combined with cross-correlation techniques, termed molecule mapping, can effectively detect exoplanets close to their stars by identifying molecular absorption features, outperforming traditional imaging methods.
Contribution
It introduces and validates the molecule mapping technique using archival SINFONI data, showing its potential for high-contrast exoplanet detection near stars with current and future instruments.
Findings
Significant detection of $eta$ Pictoris b using molecule mapping.
Cross-correlation enhances detection SNR compared to traditional methods.
Method achieves a contrast limit of $2.5\times10^{-5}$ at close angular separation.
Abstract
ADI and SDI are well-established high-contrast imaging techniques, but their application is challenging for companions at small angular separations. The aim of this paper is to investigate to what extent adaptive-optics assisted, medium-resolution (R5000) integral field spectrographs (IFS) can be used to directly detect the absorption of molecular species in the spectra of planets and substellar companions when these are not present in the spectrum of the star. We analyzed archival data of Pictoris taken with the SINFONI integral field spectrograph (VLT), originally taken to image Pic b using ADI techniques. At each spatial position in the field, a scaled instance of the stellar spectrum is subtracted from the data after which the residuals are cross-correlated with model spectra. The cross-correlation co-adds the individual absorption lines of the planet emission…
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