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The Giant Accreting Protoplanet Survey (GAPlanetS) -- Results from a Six Year Campaign to Image Accreting Protoplanets

Authors :
Follette, Katherine B.
Close, Laird M.
Males, Jared R.
Ward-Duong, Kimberly
Balmer, William O.
Redai, Jea Adams
Morales, Julio
Sarosi, Catherine
Dacus, Beck
De Rosa, Robert J.
Toro, Fernando Garcia
Leonard, Clare
Macintosh, Bruce
Morzinski, Katie M.
Mullen, Wyatt
Palmo, Joseph
Saitoti, Raymond Nzaba
Spiro, Elijah
Treiber, Helena
Wang, Jason
Wang, David
Watson, Alex
Weinberger, Alycia J.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Accreting protoplanets represent a window into planet formation processes. We report H{\alpha} differential imaging results from the deepest and most comprehensive accreting protoplanet survey to date, acquired with the Magellan Adaptive Optics (MagAO) system's VisAO camera. The fourteen transitional disks targeted are ideal candidates for protoplanet discovery due to their wide, heavily depleted central cavities, wealth of non-axisymmetric circumstellar disk features evocative of ongoing planet formation, and ongoing stellar accretion. To address the twin challenges of morphological complexity in the target systems and PSF instability, we develop novel approaches for frame selection and optimization of the Karhounen-Loeve Image Processing algorithm pyKLIP. We detect one new candidate protoplanet, CS Cha "c", at a separation of 75mas and a Delta mag of 5.1 and robustly recover the HD142527 B and HD100453 B low mass stellar companions across multiple epochs. Though we cannot rule out a substantial scattered light contribution to its emission, we also recover LkCa 15 b. Its presence inside of the cleared disk cavity and consistency with a forward-modeled point source suggest that it remains a viable protoplanet candidate. The protoplanet PDS 70 c was marginally recovered under our conservative general methodology. However, through targeted optimization in H-alpha} imagery, we tentatively recover PDS 70 c in three epochs and PDS 70 b in one epoch. Of the many other previously-reported companions and companion candidates around objects in the sample, we do not recover any additional robust candidates. However, lack of recovery at moderate H-alpha contrast does not rule out the presence of protoplanets at these locations, and we report limiting H-alpha contrasts in such cases.<br />Comment: Final version, in press at AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2211.02109
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/acc183