13,186 research outputs found
Efficient least-squares basket-weaving
We report on a novel method to solve the basket-weaving problem.
Basket-weaving is a technique that is used to remove scan-line patterns from
single-dish radio maps. The new approach applies linear least-squares and works
on gridded maps from arbitrarily sampled data, which greatly improves
computational efficiency and robustness. It also allows masking of bad data,
which is useful for cases where radio frequency interference is present in the
data. We evaluate the algorithms using simulations and real data obtained with
the Effelsberg 100-m telescope.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted by A&
The Stellar Populations of Praesepe and Coma Berenices
We present the results of a stellar membership survey of the nearby open
clusters Praesepe and Coma Berenices. We have combined archival survey data
from the SDSS, 2MASS, USNOB1.0, and UCAC-2.0 surveys to compile proper motions
and photometry for ~5 million sources over 300 deg^2. Of these sources, 1010
stars in Praesepe and 98 stars in Coma Ber are identified as candidate members
with probability >80%; 442 and 61 are identified as high-probability candidates
for the first time. We estimate that this survey is >90% complete across a wide
range of spectral types (F0 to M5 in Praesepe, F5 to M6 in Coma Ber). We have
also investigated the stellar mass dependence of each cluster's mass and radius
in order to quantify the role of mass segregation and tidal stripping in
shaping the present-day mass function and spatial distribution of stars.
Praesepe shows clear evidence of mass segregation across the full stellar mass
range; Coma Ber does not show any clear trend, but low number statistics would
mask a trend of the same magnitude as in Praesepe. The mass function for
Praesepe (t~600 Myr; M~500 Msun) follows a power law consistent with that of
the field present-day mass function, suggesting that any mass-dependent tidal
stripping could have removed only the lowest-mass members (<0.15 Msun). Coma
Ber, which is younger but much less massive (t~400 Myr; M~100 Msun), follows a
significantly shallower power law. This suggests that some tidal stripping has
occurred, but the low-mass stellar population has not been strongly depleted
down to the survey completeness limit (~0.12 Msun).Comment: Accepted to AJ; 14 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables + 2 online-only table
They are Small Worlds After All: Revised Properties of Kepler M Dwarf Stars and their Planets
We classified the reddest () stars observed by the NASA
mission into main sequence dwarf or evolved giant stars and determined the
properties of 4216 M dwarfs based on a comparison of available photometry with
that of nearby calibrator stars, as well as available proper motions and
spectra. We revised the properties of candidate transiting planets using the
stellar parameters, high-resolution imaging to identify companion stars, and,
in the case of binaries, fitting light curves to identify the likely planet
host. In 49 of 54 systems we validated the primary as the host star. We
inferred the intrinsic distribution of M dwarf planets using the method of
iterative Monte Carlo simulation. We compared several models of planet orbital
geometry and clustering and found that one where planets are exponentially
distributed and almost precisely coplanar best describes the distribution of
multi-planet systems. We determined that M dwarfs host an average of
planets with radii of 1-4 and orbital periods of
1.5-180 d. The radius distribution peaks at and is
essentially zero at , although we identify three giant planet
candidates other than the previously confirmed Kepler-45b. There is suggestive
but not significant evidence that the radius distribution varies with orbital
period. The distribution with logarithmic orbital period is flat except for a
decline for orbits less than a few days. Twelve candidate planets, including
two Jupiter-size objects, experience an irradiance below the threshold level
for a runaway greenhouse on an Earth-like planet and are thus in a "habitable
zone".Comment: MNRAS, in press. Tables 1, 3, and 4 are available in electronic form
in the "anc" director
A K-band spectral mini-survey of Galactic B[e] stars
We present a mini-survey of Galactic B[e] stars mainly undertaken with the
Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). B[e] stars show morphological features with
hydrogen emission lines and an infrared excess, attributed to warm
circumstellar dust. In general, these features are assumed to arise from dense,
non-spherical, disk-forming circumstellar material in which molecules and dust
can condensate. Due to the lack of reliable luminosities, the class of Galactic
B[e] stars contains stars at very different stellar evolutionary phases like
Herbig AeBe, supergiants or planetary nebulae. We took near-infrared long-slit
K-band spectra for a sample of Galactic B[e] stars with the LBT-Luci I.
Prominent spectral features, such as the Brackett gamma line and CO band heads
are identified in the spectra. The analysis shows that the stars can be
characterized as evolved objects. Among others we find one LBV candidate
(MWC314), one supergiant B[e] candidate with 13CO (MWC137) and in two cases
(MWC623 and AS 381) indications for the existence of a late-type binary
companion, complementary to previous studies. For MWC84, IR spectra were taken
at different epochs with LBT-Luci I and the GNIRS spectrograph at the Gemini
North telescope. The new data show the disappearance of the circumstellar CO
emission around this star, previously detectable over decades. Also no signs of
a recent prominent eruption leading to the formation of new CO disk emission
are found during 2010 and 2013.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS (in
press
Two Wide Planetary-mass Companions to Solar-type Stars in Upper Scorpius
At wide separations, planetary-mass and brown dwarf companions to solar-type stars occupy a curious region of
parameter space not obviously linked to binary star formation or solar system scale planet formation. These
companions provide insight into the extreme case of companion formation (either binary or planetary), and
due to their relative ease of observation when compared to close companions, they offer a useful template
for our expectations of more typical planets. We present the results from an adaptive optics imaging survey
for wide (~50–500 AU) companions to solar-type stars in Upper Scorpius. We report one new discovery of a
~14 M_J companion around GSC 06214−00210and confirm that the candidate planetary-mass companion 1RXS
J160929.1−210524 detected by Lafrenière et al. is in fact comoving with its primary star. In our survey, these
two detections correspond to ~4% of solar-type stars having companions in the 6–20 M_J mass and ~200–500 AU
separation range. This figure is higher than would be expected if brown dwarfs and planetary-mass companions
were drawn from an extrapolation of the binary mass function. Finally, we discuss implications for the formation
of these objects
The Role of Multiplicity in Disk Evolution and Planet Formation
The past decade has seen a revolution in our understanding of protoplanetary
disk evolution and planet formation in single star systems. However, the
majority of solar-type stars form in binary systems, so the impact of binary
companions on protoplanetary disks is an important element in our understanding
of planet formation. We have compiled a combined multiplicity/disk census of
Taurus-Auriga, plus a restricted sample of close binaries in other regions, in
order to explore the role of multiplicity in disk evolution. Our results imply
that the tidal influence of a close (<40 AU) binary companion significantly
hastens the process of protoplanetary disk dispersal, as ~2/3 of all close
binaries promptly disperse their disks within <1 Myr after formation. However,
prompt disk dispersal only occurs for a small fraction of wide binaries and
single stars, with ~80%-90% retaining their disks for at least ~2--3 Myr (but
rarely for more than ~5 Myr). Our new constraints on the disk clearing
timescale have significant implications for giant planet formation; most single
stars have 3--5 Myr within which to form giant planets, whereas most close
binary systems would have to form giant planets within <1 Myr. If core
accretion is the primary mode for giant planet formation, then gas giants in
close binaries should be rare. Conversely, since almost all single stars have a
similar period of time within which to form gas giants, their relative rarity
in RV surveys indicates either that the giant planet formation timescale is
very well-matched to the disk dispersal timescale or that features beyond the
disk lifetime set the likelihood of giant planet formation.Comment: Accepted to ApJ; 15 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables in emulateapj forma
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