A high contrast survey for extrasolar giant planets with the Simultaneous Differential Imager (SDI)

Physics – Optics

Scientific paper

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Extrasolar Planets, Giant Planets, Simultaneous Differential Imager

Scientific paper

We present the results of a survey of 45 young (< 250 Myr), close (< 50 pc) stars with the Simultaneous Differential Imager (SDI) implemented at the VLT and the MMT for the direct detection of extrasolar planets. Our SDI devices use a double Wollaston prism and a quad filter to take images simultaneously at three wavelengths surrounding the 1.62 mm methane absorption bandhead found in the spectrum of cool brown dwarfs and extrasolar giant planets. By performing a difference of adaptive optics corrected images in these filters, speckle noise from the primary star can be significantly attenuated, resulting in photon (and flat-field) noise limited data. In our VLT data, we achieved H band contrasts ? 10 mag (5s) at a separation of 0.5" from the primary star on 45% of our targets and H band contrasts of ? 9 mag at a separation of 0.5" on 80% of our targets. With this degree of attenuation, we should be able to image (5s detection) a 7 M Jup planet 15 AU from a 70 Myr K1 star at 15 pc or a 7.8 M Jup planet at 2 AU from a 12 Myr M star at 10 pc. Using the capabilities of the unique SDI device, we also discovered a methane-rich substellar companion to SCR 1845-6357 (a recently discovered (Hambly et al., 2004) M8.5 star just 3.85 pc from the Sun (Henryet al., 2006)) at a separation of 4.5 AU (1.170" ± 0.003" on the sky) and fainter by 3.57±0.057 mag in the 1.575 mm SDI filter.
We also present high resolution (~0.1"), very high Strehl ratio (0.97±0.03) mid-infrared (IR) adaptive optics (AO) images of the AGB star RV Boo utilizing the MMT adaptive secondary AO system. RV Boo was observed at a number of wavelengths over two epochs and appeared slightly extended at all wavelengths. With such high Strehls we can achieve super-resolutions of 0.1" by deconvolving RV Boo with a point-spread function (PSF) derived from an unresolved star.
SDI on ground based telescopes provides significant speckle attenuations down to star-planet contrasts of ~1-3×10 4 . To test the classical SDI technique at contrasts of 10 6-9 , we implemented a similar multiwavelength differential imaging scheme for the JPL High Contrast Imaging Testbed.

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