Abstract

Context. High-contrast imaging (HCI) is a technique designed to observe faint signals near bright sources, such as exoplanets and circumstellar disks. The primary challenge in revealing the faint circumstellar signal near a star is the presence of quasi-static speckles, which can produce patterns on the science images that are as bright, or even brighter, than the signal of interest. Strategies such as angular differential imaging (ADI) or reference-star differential imaging (RDI) aim to provide a means of removing the quasi-static speckles in post-processing. Aims. In this paper, we present and discuss the adaptation of state-of-the-art algorithms, initially designed for ADI, to jointly leverage angular and reference-star differential imaging (ARDI) for the direct HCI of circumstellar disks. Methods. Using a collection of HCI datasets, we assessed the performance of ARDI in comparison to ADI and RDI based on iterative principal component analysis (IPCA). These diverse datasets were acquired under various observing conditions and include the injection of synthetic disk models at various contrast levels. We also considered reference stars with different levels of correlation with the science targets. Results. Our results demonstrate that ARDI with IPCA improves the quality of recovered disk images and the sensitivity to planets embedded in disks, compared to ADI or RDI individually. This enhancement is particularly pronounced when dealing with extended sources exhibiting highly ambiguous structures that cannot be accurately retrieved using ADI alone, and when the quality of the reference frames is suboptimal, leading to an underperformance of RDI. We finally applied our method to a sample of real observations of protoplanetary disks taken in star-hopping mode, and propose to revisit the protoplanetary claims associated with these disks. Among eight proposed protoplanets claimed through velocity kinks or direct imaging, none of them were re-detected in our new processed images.

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