No Clear, Direct Evidence for Multiple Protoplanets Orbiting LkCa 15: LkCa 15 bcd are Likely Inner Disk Signals
Thayne Currie, Christian Marois, Lucas Cieza, Gijs Mulders, Kellen, Lawson, Claudio Caceres, Dary Rodriguez-Ruiz, John Wisniewski, Olivier Guyon,, Timothy Brandt, N. Jeremy Kasdin, Tyler Groff, Julien Lozi, Jeffrey Chilcote,, Klaus Hodapp, Nemanja Jovanovic, Frantz Martinache

TL;DR
Recent high-resolution imaging of LkCa 15 shows that previously claimed protoplanets are likely just signals from the inner dust disk, with no direct evidence for multiple planets yet.
Contribution
This study provides the first direct imaging data that challenges prior claims of protoplanets around LkCa 15, emphasizing the importance of disk modeling in planet detection.
Findings
No direct detection of proposed protoplanets.
Extended disk emission explains previous signals.
Inner disk likely causes earlier detections.
Abstract
Two studies utilizing sparse aperture masking (SAM) interferometry and differential imaging have reported multiple jovian companions around the young solar-mass star, LkCa 15 (LkCa 15 bcd): the first claimed direct detection of infant, newly-formed planets ("protoplanets"). We present new near-infrared direct imaging/spectroscopy from the SCExAO system coupled with the CHARIS integral field spectrograph and multi-epoch thermal infrared imaging from Keck/NIRC2 of LkCa 15 at high Strehl ratios. These data provide the first direct imaging look at the same wavelengths and in the same locations where previous studies identified the LkCa 15 protoplanets and thus offer the first decisive test of their existence. The data do not reveal these planets. Instead, we resolve extended emission tracing a dust disk with a brightness and location comparable to that claimed for LkCa 15…
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