TY - JOUR
T1 - SPHERE dynamical and spectroscopic characterization of HD 142527B
AU - Claudi, R.
AU - Maire, A. L.
AU - Mesa, D.
AU - Cheetham, A.
AU - Fontanive, C.
AU - Gratton, R.
AU - Zurlo, A.
AU - Avenhaus, H.
AU - Bhowmik, T.
AU - Biller, B.
AU - Boccaletti, A.
AU - Bonavita, M.
AU - Bonnefoy, M.
AU - Cascone, E.
AU - Chauvin, G.
AU - Delboulbé, A.
AU - Desidera, S.
AU - D'Orazi, V.
AU - Feautrier, P.
AU - Feldt, M.
AU - Flammini Dotti, F.
AU - Girard, J. H.
AU - Giro, E.
AU - Janson, M.
AU - Hagelberg, J.
AU - Keppler, M.
AU - Kopytova, T.
AU - Lacour, S.
AU - Lagrange, A. M.
AU - Langlois, M.
AU - Lannier, J.
AU - Le Coroller, H.
AU - Menard, F.
AU - Messina, S.
AU - Meyer, M.
AU - Millward, M.
AU - Olofsson, J.
AU - Pavlov, A.
AU - Peretti, S.
AU - Perrot, C.
AU - Pinte, C.
AU - Pragt, J.
AU - Ramos, J.
AU - Rochat, S.
AU - Rodet, L.
AU - Roelfsema, R.
AU - Rouan, D.
AU - Salter, G.
AU - Schmidt, T.
AU - Sissa, E.
AU - Thebault, P.
AU - Udry, S.
AU - Vigan, A.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements. SPHERE is an instrument designed and built by a consortium consisting of IPAG (Grenoble, France), MPIA (Heidelberg, Germany), LAM (Marseille, France), LESIA (Paris, France), Laboratoire Lagrange (Nice, France), INAF–Osservatorio di Padova (Italy), Observatoire de Genève (Switzerland), ETH Zurich (Switzerland), NOVA (Netherlands), ONERA (France) and ASTRON (Netherlands) in collaboration with ESO. SPHERE was funded by ESO, with additional contributions from CNRS (France), MPIA (Germany), INAF (Italy), FINES (Switzerland) and NOVA (Netherlands). SPHERE also received funding from the European Commission Sixth and Seventh Framework Programmes as part of the Optical Infrared Coordination Network for Astronomy (OPTICON) under grant number Rll3–Ct–2004–001566 for FP6 (2004– 2008), grant number 226604 for FP7 (2009–2012) and grant number 312430 for FP7 (2013–2016). This work has made use of the SPHERE Data Centre, jointly operated by Osug/Ipag (Grenoble), Pytheas/Lam/Cesam (Marseille), OCA/Lagrange (Nice) and Observatoire de Paris/Lesia (Paris) and supported by a grant from Labex OSUG@2020 (Investissements d’avenir ANR10 LABX56). This work has been in particular carried out in the frame of the National Centre for Competence in Research ’PlanetS’ supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). D.M. acknowledges support from the ESO-Government of Chile Joint Comittee program “Direct imaging and characterization of exo-planets”. A.Z. acknowledges support from the CONICYT + PAI/ Convocatoria nacional subvención a la instalación en la academia, convocatoria 2017 + Folio PAI77170087. J. O. acknowledges support from the ICM (Iniciativa Científica Milenio) via the Nucleo Milenio de Formación planetaria grant, from the Uni-versidad de Valparaíso and from Fondecyt (grant 1180395).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 ESO.
PY - 2019/2/1
Y1 - 2019/2/1
N2 - Aims. HD 142527 is one of the most frequently studied Herbig Ae/Be stars with a transitional disk that hosts a large cavity that is up to about 100 au in radius. For this reason, it has been included in the guaranteed time observation (GTO) SpHere INfrared survey for Exoplanets (SHINE) as part of the Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch (SPHERE) at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in order to search for low-mass companions that might explain the presence of the gap. SHINE is a large survey within about 600 young nearby stars are observed with SPHERE with the aim to constrain the occurrence and orbital properties of the giant planet population at large (> 5 au) orbital separation around young stars. Methods. We used the IRDIFS observing mode of SPHERE (IRDIS short for infrared dual imaging and spectrograph plus IFS or integral field spectrograph) without any coronagraph in order to search for and characterize companions as close as 30 mas of the star. Furthermore, we present the first observations that ever used the sparse aperture mask (SAM) for SPHERE both in IRDIFS and IRDIFS-EXT modes. All the data were reduced using the dedicated SPHERE pipeline and dedicated algorithms that make use of the principal component analysis (PCA) and reference differential imaging (RDI) techniques. Results. We detect the accreting low-mass companion HD 142527B at a separation of 73 mas (11.4 au) from the star. No other companions with mass greater than 10 M J are visible in the field of view of IFS (∼100 au centered on the star) or in the IRDIS field of view (∼400 au centered on the star). Measurements from IFS, SAM IFS, and IRDIS suggest an M6 spectral type for HD 142527B, with an uncertainty of one spectral subtype, compatible with an object of M = 0.11 ± 0.06 M · and R = 0.15 ± 0.07 R · . The determination of the mass remains a challenge using contemporary evolutionary models, as they do not account for the energy input due to accretion from infalling material. We consider that the spectral type of the secondary may also be earlier than the type we derived from IFS spectra. From dynamical considerations, we further constrain the mass to 0.26 +0.16 -0.14 M · , which is consistent with both our spectroscopic analysis and the values reported in the literature. Following previous methods, the lower and upper dynamical mass values correspond to a spectral type between M2.5 and M5.5 for the companion. By fitting the astrometric points, we find the following orbital parameters: a period of P = 35 - 137 yr; an inclination of i = 121 - 130°, a value of Ω = 124 - 135° for the longitude of node, and an 68% confidence interval of ∼18 - 57 au for the separation at periapsis. Eccentricity and time at periapsis passage exhibit two groups of values: ∼0.2-0.45 and ∼0.45-0.7 for e, and ∼2015-2020 and ∼2020-2022 for T 0 . While these orbital parameters might at first suggest that HD 142527B is not the companion responsible for the outer disk truncation, a previous hydrodynamical analysis of this system showed that they are compatible with a companion that is able to produce the large cavity and other observed features.
AB - Aims. HD 142527 is one of the most frequently studied Herbig Ae/Be stars with a transitional disk that hosts a large cavity that is up to about 100 au in radius. For this reason, it has been included in the guaranteed time observation (GTO) SpHere INfrared survey for Exoplanets (SHINE) as part of the Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch (SPHERE) at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in order to search for low-mass companions that might explain the presence of the gap. SHINE is a large survey within about 600 young nearby stars are observed with SPHERE with the aim to constrain the occurrence and orbital properties of the giant planet population at large (> 5 au) orbital separation around young stars. Methods. We used the IRDIFS observing mode of SPHERE (IRDIS short for infrared dual imaging and spectrograph plus IFS or integral field spectrograph) without any coronagraph in order to search for and characterize companions as close as 30 mas of the star. Furthermore, we present the first observations that ever used the sparse aperture mask (SAM) for SPHERE both in IRDIFS and IRDIFS-EXT modes. All the data were reduced using the dedicated SPHERE pipeline and dedicated algorithms that make use of the principal component analysis (PCA) and reference differential imaging (RDI) techniques. Results. We detect the accreting low-mass companion HD 142527B at a separation of 73 mas (11.4 au) from the star. No other companions with mass greater than 10 M J are visible in the field of view of IFS (∼100 au centered on the star) or in the IRDIS field of view (∼400 au centered on the star). Measurements from IFS, SAM IFS, and IRDIS suggest an M6 spectral type for HD 142527B, with an uncertainty of one spectral subtype, compatible with an object of M = 0.11 ± 0.06 M · and R = 0.15 ± 0.07 R · . The determination of the mass remains a challenge using contemporary evolutionary models, as they do not account for the energy input due to accretion from infalling material. We consider that the spectral type of the secondary may also be earlier than the type we derived from IFS spectra. From dynamical considerations, we further constrain the mass to 0.26 +0.16 -0.14 M · , which is consistent with both our spectroscopic analysis and the values reported in the literature. Following previous methods, the lower and upper dynamical mass values correspond to a spectral type between M2.5 and M5.5 for the companion. By fitting the astrometric points, we find the following orbital parameters: a period of P = 35 - 137 yr; an inclination of i = 121 - 130°, a value of Ω = 124 - 135° for the longitude of node, and an 68% confidence interval of ∼18 - 57 au for the separation at periapsis. Eccentricity and time at periapsis passage exhibit two groups of values: ∼0.2-0.45 and ∼0.45-0.7 for e, and ∼2015-2020 and ∼2020-2022 for T 0 . While these orbital parameters might at first suggest that HD 142527B is not the companion responsible for the outer disk truncation, a previous hydrodynamical analysis of this system showed that they are compatible with a companion that is able to produce the large cavity and other observed features.
KW - Instrumentation: high angular resolution
KW - Protoplanetary disks
KW - Stars: formation
KW - Stars: individual: HD 142527
KW - Techniques: imaging spectroscopy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85061307024&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/201833990
DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/201833990
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85061307024
SN - 0004-6361
VL - 622
JO - Astronomy and Astrophysics
JF - Astronomy and Astrophysics
M1 - A96
ER -