LEECH: A 100 night exoplanet imaging survey at the LBT

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Abstract

In February 2013, the LEECH (LBTI Exozodi Exoplanet Common Hunt) survey began its 100-night campaign from the Large Binocular Telescope atop Mount Graham in Arizona. LEECH neatly complements other high-contrast planet imaging efforts by observing stars in L' band (3.8 microns) as opposed to the shorter wavelength near-infrared bands (1-2.3 microns). This part of the spectrum offers deeper mass sensitivity for intermediate age (several hundred Myr-old) systems, since their Jovian-mass planets radiate predominantly in the mid-infrared. In this proceedings, we present the science goals for LEECH and a preliminary contrast curve from some early data. Copyright © 2013, International Astronomical Union.

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APA

Skemer, A., Apai, D., Bailey, V., Biller, B., Bonnefoy, M., Brandner, W., … Zimmerman, N. (2013). LEECH: A 100 night exoplanet imaging survey at the LBT. In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 8, pp. 70–71). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921313007928

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