A multi-technique detection of an eccentric giant planet around accelerating star HD 57625
D. Barbato, D. Mesa, V. D'Orazi, S. Desidera, A. Ruggieri, J., Farinato, L. Marafatto, E. Carolo, D. Vassallo, S. Ertel, J. Hom, R.M. Anche,, F. Battaini, A. Becker, M. Bergomi, F. Biondi, A. Cardwell, P. Cerpelloni, G., Chauvin, S. Chinellato, C. Desgrange, S. Di Filippo

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the effectiveness of combining imaging, radial velocities, and astrometry to detect and characterize a giant exoplanet around star HD 57625, highlighting the importance of multi-technique approaches.
Contribution
First multi-technique detection and characterization of an eccentric giant planet using imaging, radial velocities, and astrometry around HD 57625.
Findings
Detected a ${8.43}_{-0.91}^{+1.10}$ M$_{ m Jup}$ planet at 5.70 au
Non-detection in imaging confirms substellar nature
Demonstrates the synergy of multiple detection methods enhances exoplanet characterization.
Abstract
The synergy between different detection methods is a key asset in exoplanetology, allowing for both precise characterization of detected exoplanets and robust constraints even in the case of non-detection. Recently, the interplay between imaging, radial velocities and astrometry has produced significant advancements in exoplanetary science. We report a first result of an ongoing survey performed with SHARK-NIR, the new high-contrast near-infrared imaging camera at the Large Binocular Telescope, in parallel with LBTI/LMIRCam in order to detect planetary companions around stars with significant proper motion anomaly. In this work we focus on HD 57625, a F8 star for which we determine a Ga age, exhibiting significant astrometric acceleration and for which archival radial velocities hint at the presence of a previously undetected massive long-period companion. We analyse…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
