1. The search for disks or planetary objects around directly imaged companions : a candidate around DH Tauri B
- Author
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Lazzoni, C., Zurlo, A., Desidera, S., Mesa, D., Fontanive, C., Bonavita, M., Ertel, S., Rice, K., Vigan, A., Boccaletti, A., Bonnefoy, M., Chauvin, G., Delorme, P., Gratton, R., Houllé, M., Maire, A. L., Meyer, M., Rickman, E., Spalding, E. A., Asensio-Torres, R., Langlois, M., Müller, A., Baudino, J.-L., Beuzit, J.-L., Biller, B., Brandner, W., Buenzli, E., Cantalloube, F., Cheetham, A., Cudel, M., Feldt, M., Galicher, R., Janson, Markus, Hagelberg, J., Henning, T., Kasper, M., Keppler, M., Lagrange, A.-M., Lannier, J., LeCoroller, H., Mouillet, D., Peretti, S., Perrot, C., Salter, G., Samland, M., Schmidt, T., Sissa, E., Wildi, F., Lazzoni, C., Zurlo, A., Desidera, S., Mesa, D., Fontanive, C., Bonavita, M., Ertel, S., Rice, K., Vigan, A., Boccaletti, A., Bonnefoy, M., Chauvin, G., Delorme, P., Gratton, R., Houllé, M., Maire, A. L., Meyer, M., Rickman, E., Spalding, E. A., Asensio-Torres, R., Langlois, M., Müller, A., Baudino, J.-L., Beuzit, J.-L., Biller, B., Brandner, W., Buenzli, E., Cantalloube, F., Cheetham, A., Cudel, M., Feldt, M., Galicher, R., Janson, Markus, Hagelberg, J., Henning, T., Kasper, M., Keppler, M., Lagrange, A.-M., Lannier, J., LeCoroller, H., Mouillet, D., Peretti, S., Perrot, C., Salter, G., Samland, M., Schmidt, T., Sissa, E., and Wildi, F.
- Abstract
Context. In recent decades, thousands of substellar companions have been discovered with both indirect and direct methods of detection. While the majority of the sample is populated by objects discovered using radial velocity and transit techniques, an increasing number have been directly imaged. These planets and brown dwarfs are extraordinary sources of information that help in rounding out our understanding of planetary systems. Aims. In this paper, we focus our attention on substellar companions detected with the latter technique, with the primary goal of investigating their close surroundings and looking for additional companions and satellites, as well as disks and rings. Any such discovery would shed light on many unresolved questions, particularly with regard to their possible formation mechanisms. Methods. To reveal bound features of directly imaged companions, whether for point-like or extended sources, we need to suppress the contribution from the source itself. Therefore, we developed a method based on the negative fake companion technique that first estimates the position in the field of view (FoV) and the flux of the imaged companion with high precision, then subtracts a rescaled model point spread function (PSF) from the imaged companion, using either an image of the central star or another PSF in the FoV. Next it performs techniques, such as angular differential imaging, to further remove quasi-static patterns of the star (i.e., speckle contaminants) that affect the residuals of close-in companions. Results. After testing our tools on simulated companions and disks and on systems that were chosen ad hoc, we applied the method to the sample of substellar objects observed with SPHERE during the SHINE GTO survey. Among the 27 planets and brown dwarfs we analyzed, most objects did not show remarkable features, which was as expected, with the possible exception of a point source close to DH Tau B. This candidate companion was detected in four different SP
- Published
- 2020
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