61 research outputs found
Insights on the Spectral Signatures of Stellar Activity and Planets from PCA
Photospheric velocities and stellar activity features such as spots and
faculae produce measurable radial velocity signals that currently obscure the
detection of sub-meter-per-second planetary signals. However, photospheric
velocities are imprinted differently in a high-resolution spectrum than
Keplerian Doppler shifts. Photospheric activity produces subtle differences in
the shapes of absorption lines due to differences in how temperature or
pressure affects the atomic transitions. In contrast, Keplerian Doppler shifts
affect every spectral line in the same way. With high enough S/N and high
enough resolution, statistical techniques can exploit differences in spectra to
disentangle the photospheric velocities and detect lower-amplitude exoplanet
signals. We use simulated disk-integrated time-series spectra and principal
component analysis (PCA) to show that photospheric signals introduce spectral
line variability that is distinct from Doppler shifts. We quantify the impact
of instrumental resolution and S/N for this work.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted to Ap
The Eccentricity Distribution of Short-Period Planet Candidates Detected by Kepler in Occultation
We characterize the eccentricity distribution of a sample of ~50 short-period
planet candidates using transit and occultation measurements from NASA's Kepler
Mission. First, we evaluate the sensitivity of our hierarchical Bayesian
modeling and test its robustness to model misspecification using simulated
data. When analyzing actual data assuming a Rayleigh distribution for
eccentricity, we find that the posterior mode for the dispersion parameter is
. We find that a two-component Gaussian
mixture model for and provides a better model
than either a Rayleigh or Beta distribution. Based on our favored model, we
find that of planet candidates in our sample come from a population
with an eccentricity distribution characterized by a small dispersion
(), and come from a population with a larger dispersion
(). Finally, we investigate how the eccentricity distribution
correlates with selected planet and host star parameters. We find evidence that
suggests systems around higher metallicity stars and planet candidates with
smaller radii come from a more complex eccentricity distribution.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Realizing the potential of astrostatistics and astroinformatics
This Astro2020 State of the Profession Consideration White Paper highlights the growth of astrostatistics and astroinformatics in astronomy, identifies key issues hampering the maturation of these new subfields, and makes recommendations for structural improvements at different levels that, if acted upon, will make significant positive impacts across astronomy
The Association of Antarctic Krill Euphausia superba with the Under-Ice Habitat
The association of Antarctic krill Euphausia superba with the under-ice habitat was investigated in the Lazarev Sea (Southern Ocean) during austral summer, autumn and winter. Data were obtained using novel Surface and Under Ice Trawls (SUIT), which sampled the 0–2 m surface layer both under sea ice and in open water. Average surface layer densities ranged between 0.8 individuals m−2 in summer and autumn, and 2.7 individuals m−2 in winter. In summer, under-ice densities of Antarctic krill were significantly higher than in open waters. In autumn, the opposite pattern was observed. Under winter sea ice, densities were often low, but repeatedly far exceeded summer and autumn maxima. Statistical models showed that during summer high densities of Antarctic krill in the 0–2 m layer were associated with high ice coverage and shallow mixed layer depths, among other factors. In autumn and winter, density was related to hydrographical parameters. Average under-ice densities from the 0–2 m layer were higher than corresponding values from the 0–200 m layer collected with Rectangular Midwater Trawls (RMT) in summer. In winter, under-ice densities far surpassed maximum 0–200 m densities on several occasions. This indicates that the importance of the ice-water interface layer may be under-estimated by the pelagic nets and sonars commonly used to estimate the population size of Antarctic krill for management purposes, due to their limited ability to sample this habitat. Our results provide evidence for an almost year-round association of Antarctic krill with the under-ice habitat, hundreds of kilometres into the ice-covered area of the Lazarev Sea. Local concentrations of postlarval Antarctic krill under winter sea ice suggest that sea ice biota are important for their winter survival. These findings emphasise the susceptibility of an ecological key species to changing sea ice habitats, suggesting potential ramifications on Antarctic ecosystems induced by climate change
- …
