ALMA and NACO observations towards the young exoring transit system J1407 (V1400 Cen)
M. A. Kenworthy, P. D. Klaassen, M. Min, N. van der Marel, A. J. Bohn,, M. Kama, A. Triaud, A. Hales, J. Monkiewicz, E. Scott, E. E. Mamajek

TL;DR
This study used ALMA and NACO observations to search for thermal emission from the exoring system of star J1407, aiming to confirm its nature and determine orbital parameters, but found no definitive bound ring system or planetary companion.
Contribution
First combined ALMA and NACO observations targeting the J1407 system to constrain the properties of its hypothesized exoring system and potential substellar companion.
Findings
No point source detected at J1407's location, upper flux limit of 57.6 μJy.
Detected a point source consistent with a dust-enshrouded substellar object or background galaxy.
ALMA data suggest the ring system's dust is smaller than 1 mm, indicating a young ring structure.
Abstract
Our aim was to directly detect the thermal emission of the putative exoring system responsible for the complex deep transits observed in the light curve for the young Sco-Cen star 1SWASP J140747.93-394542.6 (V1400 Cen, hereafter J1407), confirming it as the occulter seen in May 2007, and to determine its orbital parameters with respect to the star. We used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to observe the field centred on J1407 in the 340 GHz (Band 7) continuum in order to determine the flux and astrometric location of the ring system relative to the star. We used the VLT/NACO camera to observe the J1407 system in March 2019 and to search for the central planetary mass object at thermal infrared wavelengths. We detect no point source at the expected location of J1407, and derive an upper limit level of . There is a point source detected at…
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