VLT/SPHERE survey for exoplanets around young, early-type stars including systems with multi-belt architectures
M. Lombart, G. Chauvin, P. Rojo, E. Lagadec, P. Delorme, H. Beust, M., Bonnefoy, R. Galicher, R. Gratton, D. Mesa, M. Bonavita, F. Allard, A. Bayo,, A. Boccaletti, S. Desidera, J. Girard, J.S. Jenkins, H. Klahr, G. Laibe,, A.-M. Lagrange, C. Lazzoni, G.-D. Marleau, D. Minniti

TL;DR
This survey used high-contrast imaging to search for giant exoplanets around young, early-type stars with debris disks, finding constraints on possible planetary systems and identifying background objects.
Contribution
First systematic direct imaging survey targeting young, early-type stars with multi-belt debris architectures using VLT/SPHERE, providing new constraints on planet presence.
Findings
Confirmed some companions as background sources or binaries.
Established minimum planet masses needed to clear debris gaps.
Sensitive to planets down to approximately 1.7-3.6 Jupiter masses.
Abstract
Dusty debris disks around pre- and main-sequence stars are potential signposts for the existence of planetesimals and exoplanets. Giant planet formation is therefore expected to play a key role in the evolution of the disk. This is indirectly confirmed by extant sub-millimeter near-infrared images of young protoplanetary and cool dusty debris disks around main sequence stars usually showing substantial spatial structures. A majority of recent discoveries of imaged giant planets have been obtained around young, early-type stars hosting a circumstellar disk. In this context, we have carried out a direct imaging program designed to maximize our chances of giant planet discovery and targeting twenty-two young, early-type stars. About half of them show indication of multi-belt architectures. Using the IRDIS dual-band imager and the IFS integral field spectrograph of SPHERE to acquire…
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