Three accelerating stars yield one stellar companion at 166 AU, one 45 Jupiter-mass object at ~18 AU, and one 9.5 Jupiter-mass object at 6.4 AU that is 65% likely to be a planet.
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5 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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A single critical RV observation enhances recovery of long-period super-Jupiters by 3.5 times for Saturn-like periods in injection-recovery tests bridging HIRES and KPF baselines.
New companion HIP 53005 C shows strongly conflicting mass estimates of ~80 M_Jup from photometry versus ~185 M_Jup from dynamics, possibly indicating binarity or an unseen closer companion.
The disk instability model remains viable for explaining giant planets that form early, at large orbital distances, and around M-dwarf stars, supported by updated simulations and observations.
citing papers explorer
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Gaia Exoplanet Orbits, Demographics, and Evolution Survey (GEODES): Characteristics of Three Long-Period Companions Accelerating their Host Stars
Three accelerating stars yield one stellar companion at 166 AU, one 45 Jupiter-mass object at ~18 AU, and one 9.5 Jupiter-mass object at 6.4 AU that is 65% likely to be a planet.
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What's the (RV) Point? A $3.5\times$ Enhancement in Super-Jupiters with Saturn-like Periods from a Critical Observation
A single critical RV observation enhances recovery of long-period super-Jupiters by 3.5 times for Saturn-like periods in injection-recovery tests bridging HIRES and KPF baselines.
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Discovery of a Low-Mass Companion to the Accelerating Star HIP 53005 with Strongly Conflicting Mass Estimates
New companion HIP 53005 C shows strongly conflicting mass estimates of ~80 M_Jup from photometry versus ~185 M_Jup from dynamics, possibly indicating binarity or an unseen closer companion.
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Giant Planet Formation by Disk Instability
The disk instability model remains viable for explaining giant planets that form early, at large orbital distances, and around M-dwarf stars, supported by updated simulations and observations.
- Mars as an Exoplanet: Lessons from a Planet at the Edge of Habitability