HR 8799

This system harbors four super-Jupiters orbiting with periods that range from decades to centuries.

These #exoplanets have been directly #imaged.

This footage consists of 10 images of HR 8799 taken with the #Keck Telescope over 12 years.

Video made by Jason Wang, data reduced by William Thompson and Christian Marois, and observations organized by Quinn Konopacky. Bruce Macintosh, Travis Barman, and Ben Zuckerman assisted in the observations.

#astronomy
https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.14213

Deep orbital search for additional planets in the HR 8799 system

The HR 8799 system hosts four massive planets orbiting 15 and 80 AU. Studies of the system's orbital stability and its outer debris disk open the possibility of additional planets, both interior to and exterior to the known system. Reaching a sufficient sensitivity to search for interior planets is very challenging due to the combination of bright quasi static speckle noise close to the stellar diffraction core and relatively fast orbital motion. In this work, we present a deep L-band imaging campaign using NIRC2 at Keck comprising 14 observing sequences. We further re-reduce archival data for a total of 16.75 hours, one of the largest uniform datasets of a single direct imaging target. Using a Bayesian modeling technique for detecting planets in images while compensating for plausible orbital motion, we then present deep limits on the existence of additional planets in the HR 8799 system. The final combination shows a tentative candidate, consistent with 4-7 $M_{jup}$ at 4-5 AU, detected with an equivalent false alarm probability better than $3σ$. This analysis technique is widely applicable to archival data and to new observations from upcoming missions that revisit targets at multiple epochs.

arXiv.org
@mustapipa the fact that we're actually witnessing exoplanets orbiting their star is... simply mind blowing. Got to wonder what more hides in there.

@mikamyllynen These are very distant giant planets.

But their presence implies that the disk, out of which they formed, was very massive, and there are thus many more smaller objects.

Detecting them is another matter though...

@mustapipa apparently it's quite young system, so perhaps future generation telescopes will reveal us many exiting things about how our own past might have played out as well :-)
@mustapipa that gave me chills
@mustapipa This is a beautiful video, thanks for sharing. Also interesting to see how the image quality improves over time. There are no more speckles around the star for later times, while at the beginning they were important.
@mustapipa interesting that keck did this, I wonder what it would look like through jwst.

@spinal I am not convinced JWST results would be better.

Although JWST is large, Keck is even larger with a 10m mirror diameter, and capable of better angular resolution even behind the turbulent atmosphere. Also, JWST operates on near infrared, and that implies longer radiation wavelength and lower resolution.

Combining light from both Keck telescopes also gives us an interferometer with an effective diameter of 85m.

@mustapipa ah that’s interesting, I didn’t really know that, thanks!

@spinal JWST can see fainter and thus smaller planets though because at infrared their brightness is greater than at visible wavelengths.

But these things are complicated and different telescopes have different capabilities and thus are used for different purposes.

The details are often pretty difficult figure out even for professionals, so don't worry!