The Possible Astrometric Signature of a Planetary-mass Companion to the Nearby Young Star TW Piscis Austrini (Fomalhaut B): Constraints from Astrometry, Radial Velocities, and Direct Imaging
Robert J. De Rosa, Thomas M. Esposito, Lea A. Hirsch, Eric L. Nielsen,, Mark S. Marley, Paul Kalas, Jason J. Wang, Bruce Macintosh

TL;DR
This study combines astrometry, radial velocities, and direct imaging to suggest the presence of a planetary-mass companion to TW Piscis Austrini, providing constraints on its mass and orbit, and highlighting its potential for future atmospheric studies.
Contribution
It presents the first combined analysis of astrometry, radial velocities, and imaging to detect and constrain a planetary companion around TW Piscis Austrini.
Findings
Astrometric acceleration indicates a substellar companion.
Estimated companion mass is approximately 1.2 Jupiter masses.
The orbital period remains highly uncertain due to aliasing.
Abstract
We present constraints on the presence of substellar companions to the nearby ( pc), young ( Myr) K4Ve star TW Piscis Austrini, the wide (0.3 pc) companion to the A4V star Fomalhaut. We combined absolute astrometry from Hipparcos and Gaia with literature radial velocity measurements and dedicated high-contrast imaging observations obtained with Keck/NIRC2 to achieve sensitivity to brown dwarf and planetary-mass companions ( M) over many decades of orbital period ( yr). The significant astrometric acceleration measured between the Hipparcos and Gaia catalogues, reported previously in the literature, cannot be explained by the orbital motion of TW PsA around the barycenter of the Fomalhaut triple system. Instead, we find that it is consistent with the reflex motion induced by an orbiting substellar companion. The combination…
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