Constraints on the nearby exoplanet $\epsilon$ Ind Ab from deep near/mid-infrared imaging limits
Gayathri Viswanath, Markus Janson, Carl-Henrik Dahlqvist, Dominique, Petit dit de la Roche, Matthias Samland, Julien Girard, Prashant Pathak,, Markus Kasper, Fabo Feng, Michael Meyer, Anna Boehle, Sascha P. Quanz, Hugh, R.A. Jones, Olivier Absil, Wolfgang Brandner

TL;DR
This study used deep infrared imaging to set upper limits on the brightness and mass of the exoplanet $$ Ind Ab, constraining its age and properties through non-detections and atmospheric models.
Contribution
First deep infrared imaging limits on $$ Ind Ab combining multiple instruments, providing constraints on its mass and system age based on non-detection.
Findings
Mass detection limits as low as 1.7 M_J at 1 Gyr
Non-detection constrains system age to at least 2 Gyr
Combining multiple wavelengths improves robustness of exoplanet characterization
Abstract
The past decade has seen increasing efforts in detecting and characterising exoplanets by high contrast imaging in the near/mid-infrared, which is the optimal wavelength domain for studying old, cold planets. In this work, we present deep AO imaging observations of the nearby Sun-like star Ind A with NaCo () and NEAR (10-12.5 microns) instruments at VLT, in an attempt to directly detect its planetary companion whose presence has been indicated from radial velocity (RV) and astrometric trends. We derive brightness limits from the non-detection of the companion with both instruments, and interpret the corresponding sensitivity in mass based on both cloudy and cloud-free atmospheric and evolutionary models. For an assumed age of 5 Gyr for the system, we get detectable mass limits as low as 4.4 in NaCo and 8.2 in NEAR bands at…
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