The metal content of stars (and galaxies) is of great interest as it relates to the theories of element formation, and through these to the history of our galaxy, the frequency of supernovae, the star formation rate and even the quasar rate. The kinematics and metallicity of stars have been correlated in a theory of formation of the galaxy by Eggen et al. (1962). Alternate theories (Unsold 1969) have also been proposed. Much work has gone into isolating individual metal deficient stars and determining their abundances, and also the abundances for stars in clusters.
With the development of high contrast imaging techniques and infrared
detectors, vast efforts have been devoted during the past decade to detect and
characterize lighter, cooler and closer companions to nearby stars, and
ultimately image new planetary systems. Complementary to other observing
techniques (radial velocity, transit, micro-lensing, pulsar-timing), this
approach has opened a new astrophysical window to study the physical properties
and the formation mechanisms of brown dwarfs and planets. I here will briefly
present the observing challenge, the different observing techniques, strategies
and samples of current exoplanet imaging searches that have been selected in
the context of the LAOG-Planet Imaging Surveys. I will finally describe the
most recent results that led to the discovery of giant planets probably formed
like the ones of our solar system, offering exciting and attractive
perspectives for the future generation of deep imaging instruments.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Invited talk of "Exoplanets and disks: their
formation and diversity" conference, 9-12 March 200
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