228 research outputs found
Estimates of the Planet Yield from Ground-based High-contrast Imaging Observations as a Function of Stellar Mass
We use Monte Carlo simulations to estimate the number of extrasolar planets that are directly detectable in the solar neighborhood using current and forthcoming high-contrast imaging instruments. Our calculations take into consideration the important factors that govern the likelihood for imaging a planet, including the statistical properties of stars in the solar neighborhood, correlations between star and planet properties, observational effects, and selection criteria. We consider several different ground-based surveys, both biased and unbiased, and express the resulting planet yields as a function of stellar mass. Selecting targets based on their youth and visual brightness, we find that strong correlations between star mass and planet properties are required to reproduce high-contrast imaging results to date (i.e., HR 8799, Ī² Pic). Using the most recent empirical findings for the occurrence rate of gas-giant planets from radial velocity (RV) surveys, our simulations indicate that naive extrapolation of the Doppler planet population to semimajor axes accessible to high-contrast instruments provides an excellent agreement between simulations and observations using present-day contrast levels. In addition to being intrinsically young and sufficiently bright to serve as their own beacon for adaptive optics correction, A-stars have a high planet occurrence rate and propensity to form massive planets in wide orbits, making them ideal targets. The same effects responsible for creating a multitude of detectable planets around massive stars conspire to reduce the number orbiting low-mass stars. However, in the case of a young stellar cluster, where targets are approximately the same age and situated at roughly the same distance, MK-stars can easily dominate the number of detections because of an observational bias related to small number statistics. The degree to which low-mass stars produce the most planet detections in this special case depends upon whether multiple formation mechanisms are at work. Upon relaxing our assumption that planets in ultra-wide (a > 100 AU) orbits resemble the RV sample, our simulations suggest that the companions found orbiting late-type stars (AB Pic, 1RXSJ1609, GSC 06214, etc.) are consistent with a formation channel distinct from that of RV planets. These calculations explain why planets have thus far been imaged preferentially around A-stars and K-, M-stars, but no spectral types in between, despite concerted efforts targeting F-, G-stars
Direct Detection of Planets Orbiting Large Angular Diameter Stars: Sensitivity of an Internally Occulting Space-based Coronagraph
High-contrast imaging observations of large angular diameter stars enable complementary science questions to be addressed compared to the baseline goals of proposed missions like the Terrestrial Planet Finder-Coronagraph, New World's Observer, and others. Such targets, however, present a practical problem in that finite stellar size results in unwanted starlight reaching the detector, which degrades contrast. In this paper, we quantify the sensitivity, in terms of contrast, of an internally occulting, space-based coronagraph as a function of stellar angular diameter, from unresolved dwarfs to the largest evolved stars. Our calculations show that an assortment of band-limited image masks can accommodate a diverse set of observations to help maximize mission scientific return. We discuss two applications based on the results: the spectro-photometric study of planets already discovered with the radial velocity technique to orbit evolved stars, which we elucidate with the example of Pollux b, and the direct detection of planets orbiting our closest neighbor, Ī± Centauri, whose primary component is on the main sequence but subtends an appreciable angle on the sky. It is recommended that similar trade studies be performed with other promising internal, external, and hybrid occulter designs for comparison, as there is relevance to a host of interesting topics in planetary science and related fields
Very Low Mass Stellar and Substellar Companions to Solar-like Stars from MARVELS. II. A Short-period Companion Orbiting an F Star with Evidence of a Stellar Tertiary and Significant Mutual Inclination
We report the discovery via radial velocity (RV) measurements of a short-period (P = 2.430420 Ā± 0.000006 days) companion to the F-type main-sequence star TYC 2930-00872-1. A long-term trend in the RV data also suggests the presence of a tertiary stellar companion with P > 2000 days. High-resolution spectroscopy of the host star yields T_(eff) = 6427 Ā± 33 K, log g = 4.52 Ā± 0.14, and [Fe/H] = ā0.04 Ā± 0.05. These parameters, combined with the broadband spectral energy distribution (SED) and a parallax, allow us to infer a mass and radius of the host star of M_1 = 1.21 Ā± 0.08 M_ā and R_1 = 1.09^(+0.15)_(ā0.13) R_ā. The minimum mass of the inner companion is below the hydrogen-burning limit; however, the true mass is likely to be substantially higher. We are able to exclude transits of the inner companion with high confidence. Further, the host star spectrum exhibits a clear signature of Ca H and K core emission, indicating stellar activity, but a lack of photometric variability and small v sin I suggest that the primary's spin axis is oriented in a pole-on configuration. The rotational period of the primary estimated through an activity-rotation relation matches the orbital period of the inner companion to within 1.5 Ļ, suggesting that the primary and inner companion are tidally locked. If the inner companion's orbital angular momentum vector is aligned with the stellar spin axis as expected through tidal evolution, then it has a stellar mass of ~0.3-0.4 M_ā. Direct imaging limits the existence of stellar companions to projected separations <30 AU. No set of spectral lines and no significant flux contribution to the SED from either companion are detected, which places individual upper mass limits of M_([2,3]) ā¾ 1.0 M_ā, provided they are not stellar remnants. If the tertiary is not a stellar remnant, then it likely has a mass of ~0.5-0.6 M_ā, and its orbit is likely significantly inclined from that of the secondary, suggesting that the Kozai-Lidov mechanism may have driven the dynamical evolution of this system
Discovery of a Low-mass Companion to a Metal-rich F Star with the MARVELS Pilot Project
We report the discovery of a low-mass companion orbiting the metal-rich, main sequence F star TYC 2949-00557-1 during the Multi-object APO Radial Velocity Exoplanet Large-area Survey (MARVELS) pilot project. The host star has an effective temperature T_(eff) = 6135 Ā± 40 K, logg = 4.4 Ā± 0.1, and [Fe/H] = 0.32 Ā± 0.01, indicating a mass of M_ā = 1.25 Ā± 0.09 M_ā and R = 1.15 Ā± 0.15 R_ā. The companion has an orbital period of 5.69449 Ā± 0.00023 days and straddles the hydrogen burning limit with a minimum mass of 64 M_J , and thus may be an example of the rare class of brown dwarfs orbiting at distances comparable to those of "Hot Jupiters." We present relative photometry that demonstrates that the host star is photometrically stable at the few millimagnitude level on time scales of hours to years, and rules out transits for a companion of radius ā³ 0.8 R_J at the 95% confidence level. Tidal analysis of the system suggests that the star and companion are likely in a double synchronous state where both rotational and orbital synchronization have been achieved. This is the first low-mass companion detected with a multi-object, dispersed, fixed-delay interferometer
Assessing Phase Reconstruction Accuracy for Different Nonlinear Curvature Wavefront Sensor Configurations
The nonlinear curvature wavefront sensor (nlCWFS) offers improved sensitivity
for adaptive optics (AO) systems compared to existing wavefront sensors, such
as the Shack-Hartmann. The nominal nlCWFS design uses a series of imaging
planes offset from the pupil along the optical propagation axis as inputs to a
numerically-iterative reconstruction algorithm. Research into the nlCWFS has
assumed that the device uses four measurement planes configured symmetrically
around the optical system pupil. This assumption is not strictly required. In
this paper, we perform the first systematic exploration of the location,
number, and spatial sampling of measurement planes for the nlCWFS. Our
numerical simulations show that the original, symmetric four-plane
configuration produces the most consistently accurate results in the shortest
time over a broad range of seeing conditions. We find that the inner
measurement planes should be situated past the Talbot distance corresponding to
a spatial period of . The outer planes should be large enough to fully
capture field intensity and be situated beyond a distance corresponding to a
Fresnel-number-scaled equivalent of km for a m pupil with
nm. The minimum spatial sampling required for diffraction-limited
performance is 4-5 pixels per as defined in the pupil plane. We find that
neither three-plane nor five-plane configurations offer significant
improvements compared to the original design. These results can impact future
implementations of the nlCWFS by informing sensor design.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in JATIS.
arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2209.0007
Giant Planet Occurrence in the Stellar Mass-Metallicity Plane
Correlations between stellar properties and the occurrence rate of exoplanets
can be used to inform the target selection of future planet search efforts and
provide valuable clues about the planet formation process. We analyze a sample
of 1194 stars drawn from the California Planet Survey targets to determine the
empirical functional form describing the likelihood of a star harboring a giant
planet as a function of its mass and metallicity. Our stellar sample ranges
from M dwarfs with masses as low as 0.2 Msun to intermediate-mass subgiants
with masses as high as 1.9 Msun. In agreement with previous studies, our sample
exhibits a planet-metallicity correlation at all stellar masses; the fraction
of stars that harbor giant planets scales as f \propto 10^{1.2 [Fe/H]}. We can
rule out a flat metallicity relationship among our evolved stars (at 98%
confidence), which argues that the high metallicities of stars with planets are
not likely due to convective envelope "pollution." Our data also rule out a
constant planet occurrence rate for [Fe/H]< 0, indicating that giant planets
continue to become rarer at sub-Solar metallicities. We also find that planet
occurrence increases with stellar mass (f \propto Mstar), characterized by a
rise from 3.5% around M dwarfs (0.5 Msun) to 14% around A stars (2 Msun), at
Solar metallicity. We argue that the correlation between stellar properties and
giant planet occurrence is strong supporting evidence of the core accretion
model of planet formation.Comment: Fixed minor typos, modified the last paragraph of Section
Searching for young Jupiter analogs around AP Col: L-band high-contrast imaging of the closest pre-main sequence star
The nearby M-dwarf AP Col was recently identified by Riedel et al. 2011 as a
pre-main sequence star (age 12 - 50 Myr) situated only 8.4 pc from the Sun. The
combination of its youth, distance, and intrinsically low luminosity make it an
ideal target to search for extrasolar planets using direct imaging. We report
deep adaptive optics observations of AP Col taken with VLT/NACO and Keck/NIRC2
in the L-band. Using aggressive speckle suppression and background subtraction
techniques, we are able to rule out companions with mass m >= 0.5 - 1M_Jup for
projected separations a>4.5 AU, and m >= 2 M_Jup for projected separations as
small as 3 AU, assuming an age of 40 Myr using the COND theoretical
evolutionary models. Using a different set of models the mass limits increase
by a factor of ~2. The observations presented here are the deepest
mass-sensitivity limits yet achieved within 20 AU on a star with direct
imaging. While Doppler radial velocity surveys have shown that Jovian bodies
with close-in orbits are rare around M-dwarfs, gravitational microlensing
studies predict that ~17% of these stars host massive planets with orbital
separations of 1-10 AU. Sensitive high-contrast imaging observations, like
those presented here, will help to validate results from complementary
detection techniques by determining the frequency of gas giant planets on wide
orbits around M-dwarfs.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 6 pages text ApJ style (incl.
references), 4 figures, 1 tabl
KELT-1b: A Strongly Irradiated, Highly Inflated, Short Period, 27 Jupiter-mass Companion Transiting a Mid-F Star
We present the discovery of KELT-1b, the first transiting low-mass companion from the wide-field Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope-North (KELT-North) transit survey. A joint analysis of the spectroscopic, radial velocity, and photometric data indicates that the V = 10.7 primary is a mildly evolved mid-F star with T eff = 6516 Ā± 49 K, log g = 4.228^(+0.014)_(ā0.021), and [Fe/H] = 0.052 Ā± 0.079, with an inferred mass M_* = 1.335 Ā± 0.063 M_ā and radius R_* = 1.471^(+0.045)_(ā0.035) R_ā. The companion is a low-mass brown dwarf or a super-massive planet with mass M_P = 27.38 Ā± 0.93 M_(Jup) and radius R_P = 1.116^(+0.038)_(ā0.029) R_(Jup). The companion is on a very short (~29 hr) period circular orbit, with an ephemeris T_c (BJD_(TDB)) = 2455909.29280 Ā± 0.00023 and P = 1.217501 Ā± 0.000018 days. KELT-1b receives a large amount of stellar insolation, resulting in an estimated equilibrium temperature assuming zero albedo and perfect redistribution of T_(eq) = 2423^(+34)_(ā27) K. Comparison with standard evolutionary models suggests that the radius of KELT-1b is likely to be significantly inflated. Adaptive optics imaging reveals a candidate stellar companion to KELT-1 with a separation of 588 Ā± 1 mas, which is consistent with an M dwarf if it is at the same distance as the primary. Rossiter-McLaughlin measurements during transit imply a projected spin-orbit alignment angle Ī» = 2 Ā± 16 deg, consistent with a zero obliquity for KELT-1. Finally, the v sin I_* = 56 Ā± 2 km ^(sā1) of the primary is consistent at ~2Ļ with tidal synchronization. Given the extreme parameters of the KELT-1 system, we expect it to provide an important testbed for theories of the emplacement and evolution of short-period companions, as well as theories of tidal dissipation and irradiated brown dwarf atmospheres
Planet Hunters: A Transiting Circumbinary Planet in a Quadruple Star System
We report the discovery and confirmation of a transiting circumbinary planet (PH1b) around KIC 4862625, an eclipsing binary in the Kepler field. The planet was discovered by volunteers searching the first six Quarters of publicly available Kepler data as part of the Planet Hunters citizen science project. Transits of the planet across the larger and brighter of the eclipsing stars are detectable by visual inspection every ~137 days, with seven transits identified in Quarters 1-11. The physical and orbital parameters of both the host stars and planet were obtained via a photometric-dynamical model, simultaneously fitting both the measured radial velocities and the Kepler light curve of KIC 4862625. The 6.18 Ā± 0.17 R_ā planet orbits outside the 20 day orbit of an eclipsing binary consisting of an F dwarf (1.734 Ā± 0.044 R_ā, 1.528 Ā± 0.087 M_ā) and M dwarf (0.378 Ā± 0.023 R_ā, 0.408 Ā± 0.024 M_ā). For the planet, we find an upper mass limit of 169 M_ā (0.531 Jupiter masses) at the 99.7% confidence level. With a radius and mass less than that of Jupiter, PH1b is well within the planetary regime. Outside the planet's orbit, at ~1000 AU, a previously unknown visual binary has been identified that is likely bound to the planetary system, making this the first known case of a quadruple star system with a transiting planet
The Ninth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: First Spectroscopic Data from the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS-III) presents the first spectroscopic data from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). This ninth data release (DR9) of the SDSS project includes 535,995 new galaxy spectra (median z ~ 0.52), 102,100 new quasar spectra (median z ~ 2.32), and 90,897 new stellar spectra, along with the data presented in previous data releases. These spectra were obtained with the new BOSS spectrograph and were taken between 2009 December and 2011 July. In addition, the stellar parameters pipeline, which determines radial velocities, surface temperatures, surface gravities, and metallicities of stars, has been updated and refined with improvements in temperature estimates for stars with T_(eff) -0.5. DR9 includes new stellar parameters for all stars presented in DR8, including stars from SDSS-I and II, as well as those observed as part of the SEGUE-2. The astrometry error introduced in the DR8 imaging catalogs has been corrected in the DR9 data products. The next data release for SDSS-III will be in Summer 2013, which will present the first data from the APOGEE along with another year of data from BOSS, followed by the final SDSS-III data release in 2014 December
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