Astrometric Accelerations as Dynamical Beacons: A Giant Planet Imaged Inside the Debris Disk of the Young Star AF Lep
Kyle Franson, Brendan P. Bowler, Yifan Zhou, Tim D. Pearce, Daniella, C. Bardalez Gagliuffi, Lauren Biddle, Timothy D. Brandt, Justin R. Crepp,, Trent J. Dupuy, Jacqueline Faherty, Rebecca Jensen-Clem, Marvin Morgan,, Aniket Sanghi, Christopher A. Theissen, Quang H. Tran

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a giant planet orbiting the young star AF Lep using direct imaging and astrometric acceleration data, providing precise mass and orbital parameters, and demonstrating the effectiveness of this method for detecting long-period exoplanets.
Contribution
The study introduces a new approach combining astrometric accelerations with direct imaging to discover and characterize long-period giant planets.
Findings
Detected a 3.2 Jupiter-mass planet at 8.4 au from AF Lep
Measured orbital motion and constrained the planet's orbit
Indicated potential for additional planets in the system
Abstract
We present the direct imaging discovery of a giant planet orbiting the young star AF Lep, a 1.2 member of the 24 3 Myr Pic moving group. AF Lep was observed as part of our ongoing high-contrast imaging program targeting stars with astrometric accelerations between Hipparcos and Gaia that indicate the presence of substellar companions. Keck/NIRC2 observations in with the Vector Vortex Coronagraph reveal a point source, AF Lep b, at mas which exhibits orbital motion at the 6- level over the course of 13 months. A joint orbit fit yields precise constraints on the planet's dynamical mass of 3.2 , semi-major axis of au, and eccentricity of . AF Lep hosts a debris disk located at 50 au, but it is unlikely to be sculpted by AF Lep b, implying there may be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
