On the possibility of ground-based direct imaging detection of extra-solar planets: The case of TWA-7
Abstract
We show that ground-based direct imaging detection of extra-solar planets is possible with current technology. As an example, we present evidence for a possible planetary companion to the young T Tauri star 1RXSJ104230.3-334014 (=TWA-7), discovered by ROSAT as a member of the nearby TW Hya association. In an HST NICMOS F160W image, an object is detected that is more than 9 mag fainter than TWA-7, located 2.445 0.035 south-east at a position angle of 142.24 1.34. One year later using the ESO-NTT with the SHARP speckle camera, we obtained H- and K-band detections of this faint object at a separation of 2.536 0.077 and a position angle of 139.3 2.1. Given the known proper motion of TWA-7, the pair may form a proper motion pair. If the faint object orbits TWA-7, then its apparent magnitudes of H=16.42 0.11 and K=16.34 0.15 mag yield absolute magnitudes consistent with a 106.5 yr old 3 M jup mass object according to the non-gray theory by Burrows et al. (1997). At 55 pc, the angular separation of 2.5 corresponds to 138~AU. However, position angles and separations are slightly more consistent with a background object than with a companion.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.