A search for a 5th planet around HR 8799 using the star-hopping RDI technique at VLT/SPHERE
Z. Wahhaj, J. Milli, C. Romero, L. Cieza, A. Zurlo, A. Vigan, E., Pe\~na, G. Valdes, F. Cantalloube, J. Girard, and B. Pantoja

TL;DR
This paper introduces a star-hopping RDI technique at VLT/SPHERE to improve contrast in direct imaging of exoplanets, aiming to detect a potential fifth planet around HR 8799, but no new planet was found.
Contribution
The study presents a novel star-hopping RDI method that enhances contrast and observational flexibility for direct imaging of exoplanets, demonstrated on the HR 8799 system.
Findings
Achieved up to 2 magnitudes contrast improvement at 0.1''
Did not detect the hypothesized fifth planet down to 3.6 MJup
Demonstrated the method's effectiveness for stars fainter than R=4 mag
Abstract
The direct imaging of extrasolar giant planets demands the highest possible contrasts (dH ~10 magnitudes) at the smallest angular separations (~0.1'') from the star. We present an adaptive optics observing method, called star-hopping, recently offered as standard queue observing for the SPHERE instrument at the VLT. The method uses reference difference imaging (RDI) but unlike earlier works, obtains images of a reference star for PSF subtraction, within minutes of observing the target star. We aim to significantly gain in contrast over the conventional angular differencing imaging (ADI) method, to search for a fifth planet at separations less than 10 au, interior to the four giant planets of the HR 8799 system. We obtained a total of 4.5 hours of simultaneous integral field spectroscopy (R~30, Y-H band with IFS) and dual-band imaging (K1 and K2-band with IRDIS) of the HR 8799 system and…
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