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Magellan Adaptive Optics first-light observations of the exoplanet $\beta$ Pic b. I. Direct imaging in the far-red optical with MagAO+VisAO and in the near-IR with NICI

Authors :
Males, Jared R.
Close, Laird M.
Morzinski, Katie M.
Wahhaj, Zahed
Liu, Michael C.
Skemer, Andrew J.
Kopon, Derek
Follette, Katherine B.
Puglisi, Alfio
Esposito, Simone
Riccardi, Armando
Pinna, Enrico
Xompero, Marco
Briguglio, Runa
Biller, Beth A.
Nielsen, Eric L.
Hinz, Philip M.
Rodigas, Timothy J.
Hayward, Thomas L.
Chun, Mark
Ftaclas, Christ
Toomey, Douglas W.
Wu, Ya-Lin
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We present the first ground-based CCD ($\lambda < 1\mu$m) image of an extrasolar planet. Using MagAO's VisAO camera we detected the extrasolar giant planet (EGP) $\beta$ Pictoris b in $Y$-short ($Y_S$, 0.985 $\mu$m), at a separation of $0.470 \pm 0.010''$ and a contrast of $(1.63 \pm 0.49) \times 10^{-5}$. This detection has a signal-to-noise ratio of 4.1, with an empirically estimated upper-limit on false alarm probability of 1.0%. We also present new photometry from the NICI instrument on the Gemini-South telescope, in $CH_{4S,1\%}$ ($1.58$ $\mu m$), $K_S$ ($2.18\mu m$), and $K_{cont}$ (2.27 $\mu m$). A thorough analysis of our photometry combined with previous measurements yields an estimated near-IR spectral type of L$2.5\pm1.5$, consistent with previous estimates. We estimate log$(L_{bol}/L_{Sun})$ = $-3.86 \pm 0.04$, which is consistent with prior estimates for $\beta$ Pic b and with field early-L brown dwarfs. This yields a hot-start mass estimate of $11.9 \pm 0.7$ $M_{Jup}$ for an age of $21\pm4$ Myr, with an upper limit below the deuterium burning mass. Our $L_{bol}$ based hot-start estimate for temperature is $T_{eff}=1643\pm32$ K (not including model dependent uncertainty). Due to the large corresponding model-derived radius of $R=1.43\pm0.02$ $R_{Jup}$, this $T_{eff}$ is $\sim$$250$ K cooler than would be expected for a field L2.5 brown dwarf. Other young, low-gravity (large radius), ultracool dwarfs and directly-imaged EGPs also have lower effective temperatures than are implied by their spectral types. However, such objects tend to be anomalously red in the near-IR compared to field brown dwarfs. In contrast, $\beta$ Pic b has near-IR colors more typical of an early-L dwarf despite its lower inferred temperature.<br />Comment: 40 pages, 20 figures. Accepted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1403.0560
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/786/1/32