The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2024)

JWST-TST High Contrast: JWST/NIRCam Observations of the Young Giant Planet β Pic b

  • Jens Kammerer,
  • Kellen Lawson,
  • Marshall D. Perrin,
  • Isabel Rebollido,
  • Christopher C. Stark,
  • Tomas Stolker,
  • Julien H. Girard,
  • Laurent Pueyo,
  • William O. Balmer,
  • Kadin Worthen,
  • Christine Chen,
  • Roeland P. van der Marel,
  • Nikole K. Lewis,
  • Kimberly Ward-Duong,
  • Jeff A. Valenti,
  • Mark Clampin,
  • C. Matt Mountain

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad4ffe
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 168, no. 2
p. 51

Abstract

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We present the first JWST/NIRCam observations of the directly imaged gas giant exoplanet β Pic b. Observations in six filters using NIRCam's round coronagraphic masks provide a high-signal-to-noise-ratio detection of β Pic b and the archetypal debris disk around β Pic over a wavelength range of ∼1.7–5 μ m. This paper focuses on the detection of β Pic b and other potential point sources in the NIRCam data, following a paper by Rebollido et al. that presented the NIRCam and MIRI view of the debris disk around β Pic. We develop and validate approaches to obtaining accurate photometry of planets in the presence of bright, complex circumstellar backgrounds. By simultaneously fitting the planet’s point-spread function and a geometric model for the disk, we obtain planet photometry that is in good agreement with previous measurements from the ground. The NIRCam data support the cloudy nature of β Pic b’s atmosphere and the discrepancy between its mass as inferred from evolutionary models and the dynamical mass reported in the literature. We further identify five additional localized sources in the data, but all of them are found to be background stars or galaxies based on their color or spatial extent. We can rule out additional planets in the disk midplane above 1 M _Jup outward of 2″ (∼40 au) and away from the disk midplane above 0.05 M _Jup outward of 4″ (∼80 au). The inner giant planet β Pic c remains undetected behind the coronagraphic masks of NIRCam in our observations.

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