RV measurements of directly imaged brown dwarf GQ Lup B to search for exo-satellites
Katelyn Horstman, Jean-Baptiste Ruffio, Konstantin Batygin, Dimitri, Mawet, Ashley Baker, Chih-Chun Hsu, Jason J. Wang, Ji Wang, Sarah Blunt,, Jerry W. Xuan, Yinzi Xin, Joshua Liberman, Shubh Agrawal, Quinn M. Konopacky,, Geoffrey A. Blake, Clarissa R. Do O, Randall Bartos

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy to search for exo-satellites around the directly imaged brown dwarf GQ Lup B, demonstrating current limitations and future prospects for detecting moons in circumplanetary disks.
Contribution
First dedicated RV observations of a directly imaged substellar companion to search for exo-satellites, with analysis of current sensitivity and future improvements.
Findings
Current RV precision limits detection to satellites 0.6-2.8% the mass of GQ Lup B.
Future spectrographs could increase sensitivity by over an order of magnitude.
Simulations suggest satellites can create observable cavities in the circumplanetary disk.
Abstract
GQ Lup B is one of the few substellar companions with a detected cicumplanetary disk, or CPD. Observations of the CPD suggest the presence of a cavity, possibly formed by an exo-satellite. Using the Keck Planet Imager and Characterizer (KPIC), a high contrast imaging suite that feeds a high resolution spectrograph (1.9-2.5 microns, R35,000), we present the first dedicated radial velocity (RV) observations around a high-contrast, directly imaged substellar companion, GQ Lup B, to search for exo-satellites. Over 11 epochs, we find a best and median RV error of 400-1000 m/s, most likely limited by systematic fringing in the spectra due to transmissive optics within KPIC. With this RV precision, KPIC is sensitive to exomoons 0.6-2.8% the mass of GQ Lup B () at separations between the Roche limit and , or the extent of the cavity inferred…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
