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A search for circularly polarized emission from young exoplanets

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We report the results of a 154 MHz survey to search for emission from exoplanets located in the Upper Scorpius subgroup of the Sco Cen OB2 Association, the closest substantial… Click to show full abstract

We report the results of a 154 MHz survey to search for emission from exoplanets located in the Upper Scorpius subgroup of the Sco Cen OB2 Association, the closest substantial region of recent star formation. This survey is different from previous efforts in that it is the first to target exoplanets orbiting Myr-old stars. Young exoplanet systems are expected to be the best candidates for radio detections given the higher magnetic field strengths predicted for young planets as well as the stronger and more dense stellar wind expected for the host stars. The radio emission from exoplanets is expected to be highly circularly polarised therefore we restricted our search to the circular polarisation images rather than the total intensity images. We carried out two different search methods using this data. The first method was a targeted search for exoplanet emission using catalogues of known stars and Hot Jupiters within the Upper Scorpius field. The second search method was a blind search for highly circularly polarised sources in the field and for sources identified only in our polarisation images. Both the blind and targeted search resulted in non-detections with typical 3-sigma flux density limits of 4--235 mJy over timescales of 1.87--1000 minutes. In particular, we place the first limits on low-frequency emission from the Hot Jupiter systems WASP-17 b and K2-33 b. These are the first results from a larger program to systematically search for low-frequency radio emission from planets orbiting young stars.

Keywords: search; circularly polarized; polarized emission; emission young; search circularly; emission

Journal Title: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Year Published: 2017

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