Abstract
We present the observational results of an L′- and M-band adaptive optics imaging survey of 54 nearby, Sun-like stars for extrasolar planets, carried out using the Clio camera on the MMT. We have concentrated more strongly than all other planet-imaging surveys to date on very nearby F, G, and K stars, prioritizing stellar proximity higher than youth. Ours is also the first survey to include extensive observations in the M band, which supplement the primary L′ observations. Models predict much better planet/star flux ratios at the L′ and M bands than at more commonly used shorter wavelengths (i.e., the H band). We have carried out extensive blind simulations with fake planets inserted into the raw data to verify our sensitivity, and to establish a definitive relationship between source significance in σ and survey completeness. We find 97% confident-detection completeness for 10σ sources, but only 46% for 7σ sources - raising concerns about the standard procedure of assuming high completeness at 5σ, and demonstrating that blind sensitivity tests to establish the significance-completeness relation are an important analysis step for all planet-imaging surveys. We discovered a previously unknown 0.15 M stellar companion to the F9 star GJ 3876, at a projected separation of about 80 AU. Twelve additional candidate faint companions are detected around other stars. Of these, 11 are confirmed to be background stars and one is a previously known brown dwarf. We obtained sensitivity to planetary-mass objects around almost all of our target stars, with sensitivity to objects below 3 M Jup in the best cases. Constraints on planet populations based on this null result are presented in our Modeling Results paper. © 2010 The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
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Heinze, A. N., Hinz, P. M., Sivanandam, S., Kenworthy, M., Meyer, M., & Miller, D. (2010). Constraints on long-period planets from an l′- and m-band survey of nearby sun-like stars: Observations. Astrophysical Journal, 714(2), 1551–1569. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/714/2/1551
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