137 research outputs found
The mass of the young planet Pictoris b through the astrometric motion of its host star
The young massive Jupiters discovered with high-contrast imaging provide a
unique opportunity to study the formation and early evolution of gas giant
planets. A key question is to what extent gravitational energy from accreted
gas contributes to the internal energy of a newly formed planet. This has led
to a range of formation scenarios from 'cold' to 'hot' start models. For a
planet of a given mass, these initial conditions govern its subsequent
evolution in luminosity and radius. Except for upper limits from radial
velocity studies, disk modelling, and dynamical instability arguments, no mass
measurements of young planets are yet available to distinguish between these
different models. Here we report on the detection of the astrometric motion of
Beta Pictoris, the 21 Myr-old host star of an archetypical directly-imaged gas
giant planet, around the system's centre of mass. Subtracting the highly
accurate Hipparcos-Gaia proper motion from the internal 3-yr Hipparcos
astrometric data reveals the reflex motion of the star, giving a
model-independent planet mass of M=11+-2 MJup. This is consistent with
scenarios in which the planet is formed in a high-entropy state as assumed by
hot start models. The ongoing data collection by Gaia will in the near future
lead to mass measurements of other young gas giants and form a great asset to
further constrain early evolution scenarios.Comment: Nature Astronomy, Aug 20, 2018; 16 pages, 4 Figs, 2 Table
Multi-frequency VLBI observations of faint gigahertz peaked spectrum sources
We present the data and analysis of VLBI observations at 1.6, 5 and 15 GHz of
a sample of faint Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) sources selected from the
Westerbork Northern Sky Survey (WENSS). The 5 GHz observations involved a
global array of 16 stations and yielded data on the total sample of 47 sources.
A subsample of 26 GPS sources with peak frequencies > 5 GHz and/or peak flux
densities > 125 mJy was observed with the VLBA at 15 GHz. A second subsample of
29 sources, with peak frequencies <5 GHz, was observed at 1.6 GHz using a 14
station global VLBI array. In this way, 44 of the 47 sources (94%) in the
sample were observed above and at or below their spectral peak. Spectral
decomposition allowed us to identify 3, 11, 7, and 2 objects as compact
symmetric objects, compact doubles, core-jet and complex sources respectively.
However, many of the sources classified as compact double or core-jet sources
show only two components making their classification rather tentative. This may
explain why the strong morphological dichotomy of GPS quasars and galaxies
found for radio-bright GPS sources, is not as clear in this faint sample.Comment: Latex, 18 pages, 8 figures; MNRAS, accepted. The paper, with higher
quality figures, may also be obtained from http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~snellen
. Minor comments of referee incorporate
On the lives of extra-galactic radio sources: the first 100,000 years
In this paper we discuss the early phase of radio source evolution as
represented by Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) and Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS)
radio sources. Correlations between their spectral peak and angular size
strongly suggest that the spectral turnovers are caused by synchrotron self
absorption, and indicate that young radio sources evolve in a self similar way.
We argue that the evolution of a radio source during its first 10^5 years is
qualitatively very different from that during the rest of its life-time. This
may be caused by the difference in the density gradient of the intra-galactic
medium inside and outside the core-radius of the host galaxy.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages & 2 figs. Invited talk at `Lifecycles of Radio
Galaxies' workshop, ed J. Biretta et al., New Astronomy Reviews. More papers
of the authors at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~snelle
Evidence against a strong thermal inversion in HD 209458 b from high-dispersion spectroscopy
Broadband secondary-eclipse measurements of hot Jupiters have indicated the
existence of atmospheric thermal inversions, but their presence is difficult to
determine from broadband measurements because of degeneracies between molecular
abundances and temperature structure. We apply high-resolution (R = 100 000)
infrared spectroscopy to probe the temperature-pressure profile of HD 209458 b.
This bright, transiting hot-Jupiter has long been considered the gold standard
for a hot Jupiter with an inversion layer, but this has been challenged in
recent publications. We observed the thermal dayside emission of HD 209458 b
with CRIRES / VLT during three nights, targeting the carbon monoxide band at
2.3 microns. Thermal inversions give rise to emission features, which means
that detecting emission lines in the planetary spectrum, as opposed to
absorption lines, would be direct evidence of a region in which the temperature
increases with altitude.
We do not detect any significant absorption or emission of CO in the dayside
spectrum of HD 209458 b, although cross-correlation with template spectra
either with CO absorption lines or with weak emission at the core of the lines
show a low-significance correlation signal with a signal-to-noise ratio of 3 -
3.5. Models with strong CO emission lines show a weak anti-correlation with
similar or lower significance levels. Furthermore, we found no evidence of
absorption or emission from H2O at these wavelengths.
The non-detection of CO in the dayside spectrum of HD 209458 b is interesting
in light of a previous CO detection in the transmission spectrum. That there is
no signal indicates that HD 209458 b either has a nearly isothermal atmosphere
or that the signal is heavily muted. Assuming a clear atmosphere, we can rule
out a full-disc dayside inversion layer in the pressure range 1 bar to 1 mbar.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Finding extraterrestrial life using ground-based high-resolution spectroscopy
Exoplanet observations promise one day to unveil the presence of
extraterrestrial life. Atmospheric compounds in strong chemical disequilibrium
would point to large-scale biological activity just as oxygen and methane do in
the Earth's atmosphere. The cancellation of both the Terrestrial Planet Finder
and Darwin missions means that it is unlikely that a dedicated space telescope
to search for biomarker gases in exoplanet atmospheres will be launched within
the next 25 years. Here we show that ground-based telescopes provide a strong
alternative for finding biomarkers in exoplanet atmospheres through transit
observations. Recent results on hot Jupiters show the enormous potential of
high-dispersion spectroscopy to separate the extraterrestrial and telluric
signals making use of the Doppler shift of the planet. The transmission signal
of oxygen from an Earth-twin orbiting a small red dwarf star is only a factor 3
smaller than that of carbon monoxide recently detected in the hot Jupiter tau
Bootis b, albeit such a star will be orders of magnitude fainter. We show that
if Earth-like planets are common, the planned extremely large telescopes can
detect oxygen within a few dozen transits. Ultimately, large arrays of
dedicated flux collector telescopes equipped with high-dispersion spectrographs
can provide the large collecting area needed to perform a statistical study of
life-bearing planets in the solar neighborhood.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures; published in Ap
Testing the Detectability of Extraterrestrial with the ELTs using Real Data with Real Noise
The future extremely large telescopes (ELTs) are expected to be powerful
tools to probe the atmospheres of extrasolar planets using high-dispersion
spectroscopy, with the potential to detect molecular oxygen in Earth-like
planets transiting nearby, late-type stars. So far, simulations have
concentrated on the optical 7600 \AA{} A-band of oxygen using synthetic noise
distributions. In this paper, we build upon previous work to predict the
detectability of molecular oxygen in nearby, temperate planets by using
archival, time-series data of Proxima Centauri from the high-dispersion UVES
spectrograph on ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT). The brightest transiting
M-dwarfs are expected to be about 25 times fainter than Proxima, a factor that
is similar to the difference in light-gathering power between the VLT and the
future ELTs. By injecting synthetic oxygen transmission signals into the UVES
data, the detectability can be studied in the presence of real
data with real noise properties. Correcting for the relatively low throughput
(4%) of the Proxima spectra to an assumed 20% throughput for a
high-dispersion spectrograph on the European ELT, we find that the molecular
oxygen signature of an Earth-twin transiting a nearby () M5V star can be detected in 20-50 transits (a total of 70-175
hours of observing time). This estimate using more realistic simulations is
close to previous predictions. Novel concepts that increase the instrumental
throughput can further reduce the time span over which such observations need
to be taken.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
- …