Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2003-03-13
Astrophys.J. 594 (2003) 538-544
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
submitted to Astrophysical Journal
Scientific paper
10.1086/376827
A significant population of nearby stars have strong far-infrared excesses, now known to be due to circumstellar dust in regions analogous to the Kuiper Belt of our solar system, though orders of magnitude more dense. Recent sub-mm and mm imaging of these systems resolves the circumstellar dust and reveals complex structures, often in the form of rings with azimuthal non-axisymmetric variations. This structure might well be due to the presence of embedded brown dwarfs or planets. We have carried out deep adaptive optics imaging of two nearby stars with such asymmetric dust: Epsilon Eridani and Vega. Ten and seven candidate companions were seen in and near the dust rings of Epsilon Eridani and Vega respectively, but second-epoch proper motion measurements indicate that all are background objects. Around these two stars we can thus exclude planetary companions at spatial scales comparable to the radius of the dust structures to a level of MK=24, corresponding to 5 Jupiter masses, for Epsilon Eridani, and MK=19-21, corresponding to 6-8 Jupiter masses, for Vega.
Becklin Eric E.
Kaisler Denise
Konopacky Quinn
Macintosh Bruce Alan
Zuckerman Ben
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