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We report radial-velocity search for short-period planets in the Pleiades open cluster. We observed 30 Pleiades member stars at the Okayama Astrophysical Observatory (OAO) with High Dispersion Echelle Spectrograph (HIDES). To evaluate and mitigate the effects of stellar activity on radial-velocity measurements, we computed four activity indicators (FWHM, $V_{rm span}$, $W_{rm span}$ and $S_{rm H{alpha}}$). Among our sample, no short-period planet candidates were detected. Stellar intrinsic RV jitter was estimated to be ${rm 52 m,s^{-1}}$, ${rm 128 m,s^{-1}}$ and ${rm 173 m,s^{-1}}$ for stars with $vsin i$ of ${rm 10 km,s^{-1}}$, ${rm 15 km,s^{-1}}$ and ${rm 20 km,s^{-1}}$, respectively. We determined the planet occurrence rate from our survey and set the upper limit to 11.4% for the planets with masses 1--13 $M_{rm JUP}$ and period 1--10 days. To set a more stringent constraint on the planet occurrence rate, we combined the result of our survey with those of other surveys targeting open clusters with ages between 30--300 Myr. As a result, the planet occurrence rate in young open clusters was found to be less than 7.4%, 2.9% and 1.9% for the planets with an orbital period of three days and masses between 1--5, 5--13, and 13--80 $M_{rm JUP}$, respectively.
We carried out an imaging survey for extrasolar planets around stars in the Pleiades (125 Myr, 135 pc) in the $H$ and $K_{S}$ bands using HiCIAO combined with the adaptive optics, AO188, on the Subaru telescope. We found 13 companion candidates faint
In this paper we search for distant massive companions to known transiting gas giant planets that may have influenced the dynamical evolution of these systems. We present new radial velocity observations for a sample of 51 planets obtained using the
We present observations with the planet finder SPHERE of a selected sample of the most promising radial velocity (RV) companions for high-contrast imaging. Using a Monte Carlo simulation to explore all the possible inclinations of the orbit of wide R
Detecting exoplanets around giant stars sheds light on the later-stage evolution of planetary systems. We observed the M giant HD 18438 and the K giant HD 158996 as part of a Search for Exoplanets around Northern circumpolar Stars (SENS) and obtained
Recent discoveries of strongly misaligned transiting exoplanets pose a challenge to the established planet formation theory which assumes planetary systems to form and evolve in isolation. However, the fact that the majority of stars actually do form