HD 95086 b

HD 95086 b
Exoplanet List of exoplanets

VLT image of the star HD 95086 and its planetary companion, seen here as a blue smudge.
Parent star
Star HD 95086
Constellation Carina
Right ascension (α) 10h 57m 03s
Declination (δ) −68° 40 02
Apparent magnitude (mV) 7.36
Distance296 ± 11 ly
(90.4 ± 3.3 pc)
Spectral type A8III
Mass (m) 1.6 M
Age 0.017+0.004
0.004
 Gyr
Orbital elements
Semi-major axis(a) 55 - 61 AU
Physical characteristics
Mass(m)5.0 ± 2.0 MJ
Surface gravity(g)3.85 ± 0.5 m/s²
Temperature (T) 1000 ± 100
Discovery information
Discovery date 2013
Discoverer(s) Rameau et al.
Discovery method Direct imaging
Discovery site Very Large Telescope
Discovery status Confirmed [1]
Other designations
Database references
Extrasolar Planets
Encyclopaedia
data
SIMBADdata
Exoplanet Archivedata
Open Exoplanet Cataloguedata

HD 95086 b is a confirmed,[1] directly imaged exoplanet orbiting the young, 17 Myr [2] A-class pre-main-sequence star HD 95086. It is roughly 5 times as massive as Jupiter and orbits 56–61 AU away from the parent star. It was detected at thermal infrared wavelengths (3.8 µm) through direct imaging, using the NACO instrument on the VLT.[3] A debris disk has been detected in this system at submillimeter wavelengths and has been resolved in the far-infrared from data obtained with the Herschel Space Observatory.[4]

The planet was initially detected in data taken in 2012 at a separation from the parent star of 623.9 ± 7.4 mas (~56 AU) and position angle of 151.8 ± 0.8 degrees. The planet was recovered at a high signal-to-noise ratio in June 2013. Astrometry for the planet in January 2012 and June 2013, and from a marginal detection in March 2013 confirm that it is bound to the parent star, not a background star. HD 95086 b's brightness at 3.8 µm when combined with sensitive upper limits on its brightness at shorter wavelengths [5] is consistent with trends seen for other young, directly imaged planets like those around HR 8799. In particular, the lower limit of its 1.65–3.8 µm color of 3.1 magnitudes excludes background stars and most brown dwarfs.

The host star is a highly probable member of the Lower Centaurus Crux star forming region.[6] The star has a mass of 1.6 solar masses making it a late A type star. It is located approximately 90 parsecs away in the constellation of Carina.[7]

HD-95086b is a massive planet that exists at a large orbital radius, therefore it is a viable candidate for a planet that formed close to its host star and was later scattered outwards via gravitational interactions with other massive particles in orbit around the star. In a debris disk, these particles are of the form of other orbiting planets or planetesimals. This scattering mechanism has been investigated for particles of the form of over-dense fluid elements like those found in a protoplanetary disk containing a planet.[8] It has been proposed that scattering events could explain observed massive planets at large orbital radii.

Spatially resolved images of the system from the Herschel Space Observatory [4] show evidence for a possible 2 belt system with a large clearing between the belts, similar to HR 8799. HD-95086b is probably responsible for carving the sharp inner edge of the outer disk, but additional planets in this system occupying the rest of the gap may be a strong possibility.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Rameau, J., Chauvin, G., Lagrange, A.-M., Boccaletti, A., Quanz, S. P., Currie, T., Mawet, D., Girard, J. H., Bonnefoy, M., Kenworthy, M. "Confirmation of the planet around HD 95086 by direct imaging". arXiv:1310.7483Freely accessible.
  2. Eric E. Mamajek. "Post-T Tauri Stars in the Nearest OB Association". Retrieved 2002-05-20.
  3. Rameau, J. "Discovery of a probable 4-5 Jupiter-mass exoplanet to HD 95086 by direct-imaging". arXiv:1305.7428Freely accessible.
  4. 1 2 Moor, A.; et al. "A resolved debris disk around the candidate planet-hosting star HD95086". arXiv:1309.1675Freely accessible.
  5. Meshkat, T.; et al. "Further Evidence of the Planetary Nature of HD 95086 b from Gemini/NICI H-band Data". arXiv:1309.0543Freely accessible.
  6. P. T. De Zeeuw (1998-09-14). "A Hipparcos census of the nearby OB associations".
  7. F. van Leeuwen. "Validation of the new Hipparcos reduction". Retrieved 2007-08-08.
  8. R. Cloutier; M-K. Lin (2013). "Orbital migration of giant planets induced by gravitationally unstable gaps: the effect of planet mass". MNRAS. arXiv:1306.2514Freely accessible. Bibcode:2013MNRAS.434..621C. doi:10.1093/mnras/stt1047.
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