Strategic Explorations of Exoplanets and Disks with Subaru (SEEDS) is a multi-year survey that used the Subaru Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii in an effort to directly image extrasolar planets and protoplanetary/debris disks around hundreds of nearby stars.[1] SEEDS is a Japanese-led international project. It consists of some 120 researchers from a number of institutions in Japan, the U.S. and the EU.[2] The survey's headquarters is at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) and led by Principal Investigator Motohide Tamura. The goals of the survey are to address the following key issues in the study of extrasolar planets and disks: the detection and census of exoplanets in the regions around solar-mass and massive stars; the evolution of protoplanetary disks and debris disks; and the link between exoplanets and circumstellar disks.[1]
The direct imaging survey was carried out with a suite of high-contrast instrumentation at the large Subaru 8.2 m telescope, including a second-generation adaptive optics (AO) system with 188 actuators (AO188) and a dedicated coronagraph instrument called HiCIAO. [3][4] Observations began in late October 2009 and were completed in early January 2015, having observed roughly 500 nearby stars (including duplicates). The survey was conducted in the H-band (1.65 micron) and once a planet/companion candidate was detected, it was also observed at other near-infrared wavelengths.[2]
SEEDS has reported four candidate planets to date. The first one is GJ 758 b, with a mass around 10–30 Jupiter masses and orbiting around a Sun-like star. The projected distance from the central star to the companion is 29 AU at a distance of around 52 light years.[5][6] The second discovery was of a very faint planet orbiting a Sun-like star named GJ 504.[7] The projected distance from the central star is 44 AU at a distance of 59 light years. The central star itself is bright, visible to the naked-eye (V ~ 5 mag), but the planet is very dim, 17–20 mag at infrared wavelengths. The planet mass is estimated to be only 3–4.5 Jupiter masses, estimated from its luminosity and age. It is one of the lightest-mass planets ever imaged.[2]
The survey also discovered a likely superjovian-mass planet named Kappa Andromedae b, orbiting a young B-type star 2.8 times the mass of Sun.[8]HD 100546 b was confirmed as a planet with a disk system around a very young star as part of the SEEDS survey. SEEDS has also reported the detection of three brown dwarfs in the Pleiades cluster as part of the Open Cluster category survey and several stellar or substellar companions around planetary systems, from the radial velocity detection. SEEDS has detected interesting fine-structures in disks around dozens of young stars. These disks exhibit gaps, spiral arms, rings, and other structures at similar radial distances where the outer planets are imaged. These structures can be considered to be "signposts" of planets. The results obtained on disks support the need for a new planet formation model.[2][9]
Additional planet and disk discoveries include:
New high resolution imaging of the AB Aurigae system[10]
^Narita, Norio; et al. (June 2010). "Search for Outer Massive Bodies around Transiting Planetary Systems: Candidates of Faint Stellar Companions around HAT-P-7". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 62 (3): 779–786. arXiv:1004.2458. Bibcode:2010PASJ...62..779N. doi:10.1093/pasj/62.3.779.
^Muto, Takayuki; et al. (April 2012). "Discovery of Small-scale Spiral Structures in the Disk of SAO 206462 (HD 135344B): Implications for the Physical State of the Disk from Spiral Density Wave Theory". Astrophysical Journal Letters. 748 (2): 22. arXiv:1202.6139. Bibcode:2012ApJ...748L..22M. doi:10.1088/2041-8205/748/2/L22. S2CID118374349.
^Tanii, Ryoko; et al. (December 2012). "High-Resolution Near-Infrared Polarimetry of a Circumstellar Disk around UX Tau A". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 64 (6): 124. arXiv:1206.1215. Bibcode:2012PASJ...64..124T. doi:10.1093/pasj/64.6.124.