Follow-up radio observations of the $\tau$ Bo\"{o}tis exoplanetary system: Preliminary results from NenuFAR
Jake D. Turner, Philippe Zarka, Jean-Mathias Griessmeier, Emilie, Mauduit, Laurent Lamy, Tomoki Kimura, Baptiste Cecconi, Julien N. Girard,, L.V.E. Koopmans

TL;DR
This study conducted follow-up radio observations of the $ au$ Boo exoplanetary system with NenuFAR, aiming to confirm previous tentative detections of planetary radio emission, but found no emission, highlighting the need for further investigation into variability and systematic effects.
Contribution
First follow-up observations of $ au$ Boo with NenuFAR to verify tentative radio emission detection, exploring variability and instrumental factors affecting planetary radio signals.
Findings
No bursty emission detected in NenuFAR observations.
Possible causes include instrumental systematic errors or planetary emission variability.
Further observations are required to understand emission variability.
Abstract
Studying the magnetic fields of exoplanets will provide valuable information about their interior structures, atmospheric properties (escape and dynamics), and potential habitability. One of the most promising methods to detect exoplanetary magnetic fields is to study their auroral radio emission. However, there are no confirmed detections of an exoplanet in the radio despite decades of searching. Recently, Turner et al. 2021 reported a tentative detection of circularly polarized bursty emission from the Boo exoplanetary system using LOFAR low-frequency beamformed observations. The likely source of this emission was presumed to be from the Boo planetary system and a possible explanation is radio emission from the exoplanet Boo b, produced via the cyclotron maser mechanism. Assuming the emission is from the planet, Turner et al. 2021 found that the derived planetary…
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