245 research outputs found
A Luminous Infrared Companion in the Young Triple System WL 20
We present spatially resolved near-infrared and mid-infrared (1-25 microns)
imaging of the WL 20 triple system in the nearby (d=125 pc) rho Ophiuchi
star-forming cloud core. We find WL 20 to be a new addition to the rare class
of "infrared companion systems", with WL 20:E and WL 20:W displaying Class II
(T-Tauri star) spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and total luminosities of
0.61 and 0.39 L_sun, respectively, and WL 20:S, the infrared companion, with a
Class I (embedded protostellar) SED and a luminosity of 1.0-1.8 L_sun. WL 20:S
is found to be highly variable over timescales of years, to be extended (40 AU
diameter) at mid-infrared wavelengths, and to be the source of the centimeter
emission in the system. The photospheric luminosities, estimated from our data,
allow us to compare and test current pre-main-sequence evolutionary tracks. WL
20:E and WL 20:W fall into the region of the H-R diagram in which sources may
appear up to twice as old as they actually are using non-accreting tracks, a
fact which may reconcile the co-existence of two T-Tauri stars with an embedded
protostar in a triple system. The derived masses and observed projected
separations of the components of the WL 20 triple system indicate that it is in
an unstable dynamical configuration, and may therefore provide an example of
dynamical evolution during the pre-main-sequence phase.Comment: AASTeX 5.0, 17 pages, 4 tables, 9 figures, accepted by AJ, to appear
Feb. 200
Correction for Self-Heating When Using Thermometers as Heaters in Precision Control Applications
In precision control applications, thermometers have temperature-dependent electrical resistance with germanium or other semiconductor material thermistors, diodes, metal film and wire, or carbon film resistors. Because resistance readout requires excitation current flowing through the sensor, there is always ohmic heating that leads to a temperature difference between the sensing element and the monitored object. In this work, a thermistor can be operated as a thermometer and a heater, simultaneously, by continuously measuring the excitation current and the corresponding voltage. This work involves a method of temperature readout where the temperature offset due to self-heating is subtracted exactly
A Mid-Infrared Imaging Survey of Embedded Young Stellar Objects in the Rho Ophiuchi Cloud Core
Results of a comprehensive, new, ground-based mid-infrared imaging survey of
the young stellar population of the Rho Ophiuchi cloud are presented. Data were
acquired at the Palomar 5-m and at the Keck 10-m telescopes with the MIRLIN and
LWS instruments, at 0.25 arcsec and 0.25 arcsec resolutions, respectively. Of
172 survey objects, 85 were detected. Among the 22 multiple systems observed,
15 were resolved and their individual component fluxes determined. A plot of
the frequency distribution of the detected objects with SED spectral slope
shows that YSOs spend ~400,000 yr in the Flat Spectrum phase, clearing out
their remnant infall envelopes. Mid-infrared variability is found among a
significant fraction of the surveyed objects, and is found to occur for all SED
classes with optically thick disks. Large-amplitude near-infrared variability,
also found for all SED classes with optically thick disks, seems to occur with
somewhat higher frequency at the earlier evolutionary stages. Although a
general trend of mid-infrared excess and NIR veiling exists proceeding through
SED classes, with Class I objects generally exhibiting K-veilings > 1, Flat
Spectrum objects with K-veilings > 0.58, and Class III objects with K-veilings
=0, Class II objects exhibit the widest range of K-band veiling values, 0-4.5.
However, the highly variable value of veiling that a single source can exhibit
in any of the SED classes in which active disk accretion can take place is
striking, and is direct observational evidence for highly time-variable
accretion activity in disks. Finally, by comparing mid-infrared vs.
near-infrared excesses in a subsample with well-determined effective
temperatures and extinction values, disk clearing mechanisms are explored. The
results are consistent with disk clearing proceeding from the inside-out.Comment: 18 pages + 5 tables + 7 figure
Characterization of the optical properties of the buried contact of the JWST MIRI Si:As infrared blocked impurity band detectors
The Mid-Infrared Instrument MIRI on-board the James Webb Space Telescope uses
three Si:As impurity band conduction detector arrays. MIRI medium resolution
spectroscopic measurements (R3500-1500) in the 5~ to 28~
wavelength range show a 10-30\% modulation of the spectral baseline; coherent
reflections of infrared light within the Si:As detector arrays result in
fringing. We quantify the shape and impact of fringes on spectra of optical
sources observed with MIRI during ground testing and develop an optical model
to simulate the observed modulation. We use our optical model in conjunction
with the MIRI spectroscopic data to show that the properties of the buried
contact inside the MIRI Si:As detector have a significant effect on the
fringing behavior.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation
2020, submitted to SPI
Mid-Infrared Observations of Class I/Flat-Spectrum Systems in Six Nearby Molecular Clouds
We have obtained new mid-infrared observations of 65 Class I/Flat-Spectrum
(F.S.) objects in the Perseus, Taurus, Chamaeleon I/II, Rho Ophiuchi, and
Serpens dark clouds. We detected 45/48 (94%) of the single sources, 16/16
(100%) of the primary components, and 12/16 (75%) of the secondary/triple
components of the binary/multiple objects surveyed. The composite spectral
energy distributions (SEDs) for all of our sample sources are either Class I or
F.S., and, in 15/16 multiple systems, at least one of the individual components
displays a Class I or F.S. spectral index. However, the occurrence of mixed
pairings, such as F.S. with Class I, F.S. with Class II, and, in one case, F.S.
with Class III, is surprisingly frequent. Such behaviour is not consistent with
that of multiple systems among T Tauri stars (TTS), where the companion of a
classical TTS also tends to be a classical TTS, although other mixed pairings
have been previously observed among Class II objects. Based on an analysis of
the spectral indices of the individual binary components, there appears to be a
higher proportion of mixed Class I/F.S. systems (65-80%) than that of mixed
Classical/Weak-Lined TTS (25-40%), demonstrating that the envelopes of Class I/
F.S. systems are rapidly evolving during this evolutionary phase. We report the
discovery of a steep spectral index secondary companion to ISO-ChaI 97,
detected for the first time via our mid-infrared observations. In our previous
near- infrared imaging survey of binary/multiple Class I/F.S. sources, ISO-ChaI
97 appeared to be single. With a spectral index of Alpha >= 3.9, the secondary
component of this system is a member of a rare class of very steep spectral
index objects, those with Alpha > 3. Only three such objects have previously
been reported, all of which are either Class 0 or Class I.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, 6 table
A Mid-Infrared Study of the Class 0 Cluster in LDN 1448
We present ground-based mid-infrared observations of Class 0 protostars in
LDN 1448. Of the five known protostars in this cloud, we detected two, L1448N:A
and L1448C, at 12.5, 17.9, 20.8, and 24.5 microns, and a third, L1448 IRS 2, at
24.5 microns. We present high-resolution images of the detected sources, and
photometry or upper limits for all five Class 0 sources in this cloud. With
these data, we are able to augment existing spectral energy distributions
(SEDs) for all five objects and place them on an evolutionary status diagram.Comment: Accepted by the Astronomical Journal; 26 pages, 9 figure
The Discovery of Infrared Rings in the Planetary Nebula NGC 1514 During the WISE All-Sky Survey
We report the discovery of a pair of infrared, axisymmetric rings in the
planetary nebula NGC 1514 during the course of the WISE all-sky mid-infrared
survey. Similar structures are seen at visible wavelengths in objects such as
the "Engraved Hourglass Nebula" (MyCn 18) and the "Southern Crab Nebula" (Hen
2-104). However, in NGC 1514 we see only a single pair of rings and they are
easily observed only in the mid-infrared. These rings are roughly 0.2 pc in
diameter, are separated by 0.05 pc, and are dominated by dust emission with a
characteristic temperature of 160 K. We compare the morphology and color of the
rings to the other nebular structures seen at visible, far-infrared, and radio
wavelengths, and close with a discussion of a physical model and formation
scenario for NGC 1514.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, final version published in 2010 December
Astronomical Journa
The quantum efficiency and diffractive image artifacts of Si:As IBC mid-IR detector arrays at 5 10 m: Implications for the JWST/MIRI detectors
Arsenic doped back illuminated blocked impurity band (BIBIB) silicon
detectors have advanced near and mid-IR astronomy for over thirty years; they
have high quantum efficiency (QE), especially at wavelengths longer than 10
m, and a large spectral range. Their radiation hardness is also an asset
for space based instruments. Three examples of Si:As BIBIB arrays are used in
the Mid-InfraRed Instrument (MIRI) of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST),
observing between 5 and 28 m. In this paper, we analyze the parameters
leading to high quantum efficiency (up to 60\%) for the MIRI devices
between 5 and 10 m. We also model the cross-shaped artifact that was first
noticed in the 5.7 and 7.8 m Spitzer/IRAC images and has since also been
imaged at shorter wavelength (m) laboratory tests of the MIRI
detectors. The artifact is a result of internal reflective diffraction off the
pixel-defining metallic contacts to the readout detector circuit. The low
absorption in the arrays at the shorter wavelengths enables photons diffracted
to wide angles to cross the detectors and substrates multiple times. This is
related to similar behavior in other back illuminated solid-state detectors
with poor absorption, such as conventional CCDs operating near 1 m. We
investigate the properties of the artifact and its dependence on the detector
architecture with a quantum-electrodynamic (QED) model of the probabilities of
various photon paths. Knowledge of the artifact properties will be especially
important for observations with the MIRI LRS and MRS spectroscopic modes.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
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