The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2023)

Detecting Exoplanets Closer to Stars with Moderate Spectral Resolution Integral-field Spectroscopy

  • Shubh Agrawal,
  • Jean-Baptiste Ruffio,
  • Quinn M. Konopacky,
  • Bruce Macintosh,
  • Dimitri Mawet,
  • Eric L. Nielsen,
  • Kielan K. W. Hoch,
  • Michael C. Liu,
  • Travis S. Barman,
  • William Thompson,
  • Alexandra Z. Greenbaum,
  • Christian Marois,
  • Jenny Patience

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/acd6a3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 166, no. 1
p. 15

Abstract

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While radial velocity surveys have demonstrated that the population of gas giants peaks around 3 au, the most recent high-contrast imaging surveys have only been sensitive to planets beyond ∼10 au. Sensitivity at small angular separations from stars is currently limited by the variability of the point-spread function. We demonstrate how moderate-resolution integral-field spectrographs can detect planets at smaller separations (≲ 0.3“) by detecting the distinct spectral signature of planets compared to the host star. Using OSIRIS ( R ≈ 4000) at the W.M. Keck Observatory, we present the results of a planet search via this methodology around 20 young targets in the Ophiuchus and Taurus star-forming regions. We show that OSIRIS can outperform high-contrast coronagraphic instruments equipped with extreme adaptive optics and non-redundant masking in the 0.05“–0.3“ regime. As a proof of concept, we present the 34 σ detection of a high-contrast M dwarf companion at ≈0.1“ with flux ratio of ≈ 0.92% around the field F2 star HD 148352. We developed an open-source Python package, breads , for the analysis of moderate-resolution integral-field spectroscopy data in which the planet and the host star signal are jointly modeled. The diffracted starlight continuum is forward-modeled using a spline model, which removes the need for prior high-pass filtering or continuum normalization. The code allows for analytic marginalization of linear hyperparameters, which simplifies the posterior sampling of other parameters (e.g., radial velocity, effective temperature). This technique could prove very powerful when applied to integral-field spectrographs such as NIRSpec on the JWST and other upcoming first-light instruments on the future Extremely Large Telescopes.

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