A scaled-up planetary system around a supernova progenitor
V. Squicciarini, R. Gratton, M. Janson, E. E. Mamajek, G. Chauvin, P., Delorme, M. Langlois, A. Vigan, S. C. Ringqvist, G. Meeus, S. Reffert, M., Kenworthy, M. R. Meyer, M. Bonnefoy, M. Bonavita, D. Mesa, M. Samland, S., Desidera, V. D'Orazi, N. Engler, E. Alecian, A. Miglio

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of giant planet-like companions around a massive B star, suggesting planet formation around high-mass stars is more common than previously thought and challenging existing formation models.
Contribution
First direct imaging detection of planetary-mass companions around a 9 solar mass star, expanding understanding of planet formation around massive stars.
Findings
Detected two substellar companions around $$ Sco at 21 and 290 au.
Companions have masses similar to Jupiter, with planet-like mass ratios.
Results challenge current core accretion and gravitational instability models.
Abstract
Virtually all known exoplanets reside around stars with ; to clarify if the dearth of planets around more massive stars is real, we launched the direct-imaging B-star Exoplanet Abundance STudy (BEAST) survey targeting B stars () in the young (5-20 Myr) Scorpius-Centaurus association (Sco-Cen). Here we present the case of a massive () BEAST target, Sco. Based on kinematic information, we found that Sco is a member of a small group which we label Eastern Lower Scorpius, refining in turn the precision on stellar parameters. Around this star we identified a robustly detected substellar companion () at a projected separation of au, and a probable second object () at au. The planet-to-star mass ratios of these objects are similar to that of Jupiter to the Sun, and their…
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