posted on 2024-01-09, 08:57authored byLK Rogers, J Debes, RJ Anslow, A Bonsor, SL Casewell, LA Dos Santos, P Dufour, BT Gänsicke, NG Fusillo, D Koester, LD Nielsen, Z Penoyre, EL Rickman, J Sahlmann, PE Tremblay, A Vanderburg, S Xu, E Dennihy, J Farihi, JJ Hermes, S Hodgkin, M Kilic, PM Kowalski, H Sanderson, S Toonen
This work combines spectroscopic and photometric data of the polluted white dwarf WD 0141−675, which has a now retracted astrometric super-Jupiter candidate, and investigates the most promising ways to confirm Gaia astrometric planetary candidates and obtain follow-up data. Obtaining precise radial velocity measurements for white dwarfs is challenging due to their intrinsic faint magnitudes, lack of spectral absorption lines, and broad spectral features. However, dedicated radial velocity campaigns are capable of confirming close-in giant exoplanets (a few MJup) around polluted white dwarfs, where additional metal lines aid radial velocity measurements. Infrared emission from these giant exoplanets is shown to be detectable with JWST Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) and will provide constraints on the formation of the planet. Using the initial Gaia astrometric solution for WD 0141−675 as a case study, if there were a planet with a 33.65 d period or less with a nearly edge-on orbit, (1) ground-based radial velocity monitoring limits the mass to <15.4 MJup, and (2) space-based infrared photometry shows a lack of infrared excess and in a cloud-free planetary cooling scenario, a substellar companion would have to be <16 MJup and be older than 3.7 Gyr. These results demonstrate how radial velocities and infrared photometry can probe the mass of the objects producing some of the astrometric signals, and rule out parts of the brown dwarf and planet mass parameter space. Therefore, combining astrometric data with spectroscopic and photometric data is crucial to both confirm and characterize astrometric planet candidates around white dwarfs.
Funding
4000138341\22\NL\GLC\my
URF\R1\211421
Irradiated atmospheres of brown dwarfs: providing an insight into exoplanet atmospheres
Laura K Rogers, John Debes, Richard J Anslow, Amy Bonsor, S L Casewell, Leonardo A Dos Santos, Patrick Dufour, Boris T. Gänsicke, Nicola Gentile Fusillo, Detlev Koester, Louise Dyregaard Nielsen, Zephyr Penoyre, Emily L Rickman, Johannes Sahlmann, Pier-Emmanuel Tremblay, Andrew Vanderburg, Siyi Xu, Erik Dennihy, Jay Farihi, J J Hermes, Simon Hodgkin, Mukremin Kilic, Piotr M Kowalski, Hannah Sanderson, Silvia Toonen, WD 0141−675: a case study on how to follow-up astrometric planet candidates around white dwarfs, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 527, Issue 1, January 2024, Pages 977–990, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad3098
Author affiliation
School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester