Atmospheric Characterization and Further Orbital Modeling of $\kappa$ And b
Taichi Uyama, Thayne Currie, Yasunori Hori, Robert J. De Rosa, Kyle, Mede, Timothy D. Brandt, Jungmi Kwon, Olivier Guyon, Julien Lozi, Nemanja, Jovanovic, Frantz Martinache, Tomoyuki Kudo, Motohide Tamura, Tyler Groff,, Jeffrey Chilcote, Masahiko Hayashi, Michael W. McElwain

TL;DR
This study combines new and existing observations to refine the atmospheric and orbital properties of $$ Andromeda b, revealing a cloudy, low-gravity atmosphere and a highly eccentric orbit, suggesting possible planetary scattering events.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive atmospheric analysis using multi-instrument data and updates the orbital parameters, proposing a scattering scenario involving unseen inner companions.
Findings
$$ And b has a cloudy atmosphere with $T_{eff} \,\sim\,1700$--2000 K.
The orbit of $$ And b is highly eccentric with $e \approx 0.77$.
Possible inner companion ($\gtrsim 10 M_{\rm Jup}$) at $\lesssim 25$ au suggested.
Abstract
We present Andromeda b's photometry and astrometry taken with Subaru/SCExAO+HiCIAO and Keck/NIRC2, combined with recently published SCExAO/CHARIS low-resolution spectroscopy and published thermal infrared photometry to further constrain the companion's atmospheric properties and orbit. And b's Y/Y-K colors are redder than field dwarfs, consistent with its youth and lower gravity. Empirical comparisons of its Y-band photometry and CHARIS spectrum to a large spectral library of isolated field dwarfs reaffirm the conclusion from Currie et al. (2018) that it likely has a low gravity but admit a wider range of most plausible spectral types (L0-L2). Our gravitational classification also suggests that the best-fit objects for And b may have lower gravity than those previously reported. Atmospheric models lacking dust/clouds fail to reproduce its entire 1--4.7 …
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