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LEECH: A 100 Night Exoplanet Imaging Survey at the LBT

Authors :
Skemer, Andrew
Apai, Daniel
Bailey, Vanessa
Biller, Beth
Bonnefoy, Mickael
Brandner, Wolfgang
Buenzli, Esther
Close, Laird
Crepp, Justin
Defrere, Denis
Desidera, Silvano
Eisner, Josh
Esposito, Simone
Fortney, Jonathan
Henning, Thomas
Hinz, Phil
Hofmann, Karl-Heinz
Leisenring, Jarron
Males, Jared
Millan-Gabet, Rafael
Morzinski, Katie
Oza, Apurva
Pascucci, Ilaria
Patience, Jenny
Rieke, George
Schertl, Dieter
Schlieder, Joshua
Skrutskie, Mike
Su, Kate
Weigelt, Gerd
Woodward, Charles E.
Zimmerman, Neil
Skemer, Andrew
Apai, Daniel
Bailey, Vanessa
Biller, Beth
Bonnefoy, Mickael
Brandner, Wolfgang
Buenzli, Esther
Close, Laird
Crepp, Justin
Defrere, Denis
Desidera, Silvano
Eisner, Josh
Esposito, Simone
Fortney, Jonathan
Henning, Thomas
Hinz, Phil
Hofmann, Karl-Heinz
Leisenring, Jarron
Males, Jared
Millan-Gabet, Rafael
Morzinski, Katie
Oza, Apurva
Pascucci, Ilaria
Patience, Jenny
Rieke, George
Schertl, Dieter
Schlieder, Joshua
Skrutskie, Mike
Su, Kate
Weigelt, Gerd
Woodward, Charles E.
Zimmerman, Neil

Abstract

In February 2013, the LEECH (LBTI Exozodi Exoplanet Common Hunt) survey began its 100-night campaign from the Large Binocular Telescope atop Mount Graham in Arizona. LEECH neatly complements other high-contrast planet imaging efforts by observing stars in L' band (3.8 microns) as opposed to the shorter wavelength near-infrared bands (1-2.3 microns). This part of the spectrum offers deeper mass sensitivity for intermediate age (several hundred Myr-old) systems, since their Jovian-mass planets radiate predominantly in the mid-infrared. In this proceedings, we present the science goals for LEECH and a preliminary contrast curve from some early data

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn999829658
Document Type :
Electronic Resource