47 research outputs found
The distribution of transit durations for Kepler planet candidates and implications for their orbital eccentricities
âIn these times, during the rise in the popularity of institutional repositories, the Society does not forbid authors from depositing their work in such repositories. However, the AAS regards the deposit of scholarly work in such repositories to be a decision of the individual scholar, as long as the individual's actions respect the diligence of the journals and their reviewers.â Original article can be found at : http://iopscience.iop.org/ Copyright American Astronomical SocietyDoppler planet searches have discovered that giant planets follow orbits with a wide range of orbital eccentricities, revolutionizing theories of planet formation. The discovery of hundreds of exoplanet candidates by NASA's Kepler mission enables astronomers to characterize the eccentricity distribution of small exoplanets. Measuring the eccentricity of individual planets is only practical in favorable cases that are amenable to complementary techniques (e.g., radial velocities, transit timing variations, occultation photometry). Yet even in the absence of individual eccentricities, it is possible to study the distribution of eccentricities based on the distribution of transit durations (relative to the maximum transit duration for a circular orbit). We analyze the transit duration distribution of Kepler planet candidates. We find that for host stars with T > 5100 K we cannot invert this to infer the eccentricity distribution at this time due to uncertainties and possible systematics in the host star densities. With this limitation in mind, we compare the observed transit duration distribution with models to rule out extreme distributions. If we assume a Rayleigh eccentricity distribution for Kepler planet candidates, then we find best fits with a mean eccentricity of 0.1-0.25 for host stars with T †5100 K. We compare the transit duration distribution for different subsets of Kepler planet candidates and discuss tentative trends with planetary radius and multiplicity. High-precision spectroscopic follow-up observations for a large sample of host stars will be required to confirm which trends are real and which are the results of systematic errors in stellar radii. Finally, we identify planet candidates that must be eccentric or have a significantly underestimated stellar radius.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
The composition of the protosolar disk and the formation conditions for comets
Conditions in the protosolar nebula have left their mark in the composition
of cometary volatiles, thought to be some of the most pristine material in the
solar system. Cometary compositions represent the end point of processing that
began in the parent molecular cloud core and continued through the collapse of
that core to form the protosun and the solar nebula, and finally during the
evolution of the solar nebula itself as the cometary bodies were accreting.
Disentangling the effects of the various epochs on the final composition of a
comet is complicated. But comets are not the only source of information about
the solar nebula. Protostellar disks around young stars similar to the protosun
provide a way of investigating the evolution of disks similar to the solar
nebula while they are in the process of evolving to form their own solar
systems. In this way we can learn about the physical and chemical conditions
under which comets formed, and about the types of dynamical processing that
shaped the solar system we see today.
This paper summarizes some recent contributions to our understanding of both
cometary volatiles and the composition, structure and evolution of protostellar
disks.Comment: To appear in Space Science Reviews. The final publication is
available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11214-015-0167-
JIRAM, the Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper
JIRAM is an imager/spectrometer on board the Juno spacecraft bound for a polar orbit around Jupiter. JIRAM is composed of IR imager and spectrometer channels. Its scientific goals are to explore the Jovian aurorae and the planet's atmospheric structure, dynamics and composition. This paper explains the characteristics and functionalities of the instrument and reports on the results of ground calibrations. It discusses the main subsystems to the extent needed to understand how the instrument is sequenced and used, the purpose of the calibrations necessary to determine instrument performance, the process for generating the commanding sequences, the main elements of the observational strategy, and the format of the scientific data that JIRAM will produce
Spectroscopic diagnostics for multi-TW laser-produced plasmas
Data from a pinhole camera and a transmission grating spectrograph
are used in multi-TW laser irradiance of thin metal films to assess
the maximum laser spot size and to show tenths of a percent
conversion of laser light to K-, L-, and M-band x rays. The
distribution of target debris, an operational issue for the
survivability of an unshielded parabola in a large laser system, is
revealed by x-ray fluorescence measurements of witness samples. At
the 25-J, 30-TW level, we find little evidence of damage to the f/3
parabola with an angle of incidence on target greater than
22
Characterization of D-T cryogenic layer formation in a Beryllium capsule using X-ray phase contrast imaging
Copper-doped beryllium capsules filled with cryogenic deuterium and
tritium (D-T) fuel layers offer many technical and manufacturing
advantages for Inertial Confinement Fusion. However, characterizing
the frozen fuel layer in such targets is challenging since
traditional x-ray radiographic techniques, which rely on absorption
for image contrast, cannot provide sufficient contrast to image the
low-Z D-T fuel layer in these targets. In this research, we employ
x-ray phase contrast imaging (XPCI), which relies on gradients in
the object's phase, to produce image contrast. We find that XPCI has
sufficient sensitivity to characterize the D-T cryogenic layers in
an ignition-scale Be(Cu) capsule. A Be(Cu) capsule is filled with
liquid D-T via a small fill-tube, and is kept at a uniform
temperature below the D-T triple point in a cryostat designed to
produce spherical isotherms. A very uniform spherical D-T ice layer
( 1.5âm RMS roughness) is formed within the capsule after a
few hours due to heating by beta-decay of the tritium. Studies
performed for D-T layer uniformity show an increase in surface
roughness as the temperature is lowered. We discuss the source and
detector characteristics necessary to obtain high quality XPCI
images of the D-T layer, wave-propagation modeling of the image
formation process, and image analysis
Ultrashort-laser-produced heavy ion generation via target laser-ablation cleaning
It has become apparent in the last few years that the
surface contamination on laser-acceleration targets is a major impediment to
the acceleration of the actual target ions. To this end we have performed
experiments at the Los Alamos Trident Laser facility using one arm of the
Trident laser at 150 ps to ablatively clean targets that are subsequently
irradiated by the Trident TW Short-pulse arm to accelerate the bulk target
ions to high energies. The 150 ps ablation pulse rids the rear of the target
of its omnipresent surface contamination layer allowing the short-pulse to
illuminate the target and accelerate ions via the Target Normal Sheath
Acceleration (TNSA) mechanism. Our experimental results are compared to the
LASNEX code to validate and improve our predictive capabilities for future
acceleration experiments