880 research outputs found
Differential Imaging with a Multicolor Detector Assembly: A New ExoPlanet Finder Concept
Simultaneous spectral differential imaging is a high contrast technique by
which subtraction of simultaneous images reduces noise from atmospheric
speckles and optical aberrations. Small non-common wave front errors between
channels can seriously degrade its performance. We present a new concept, a
multicolor detector assembly (MCDA), which can eliminate this problem. The
device consists of an infrared detector and a microlens array onto the flat
side of which a checkerboard pattern of narrow-band micro-filters is deposited,
each micro-filter coinciding with a microlens. Practical considerations for
successful implementation of the technique are mentioned. Numerical simulations
predict a noise attenuation of 10^-3 at 0.5" for a 10^5 seconds integration on
a mH=5 star of Strehl ratio 0.9 taken with an 8-m telescope. This reaches a
contrast of 10^-7 at an angular distance of 0.5" from the center of the star
image.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted APJ
Angular Differential Imaging: a Powerful High-Contrast Imaging Technique
Angular differential imaging is a high-contrast imaging technique that
reduces quasi-static speckle noise and facilitates the detection of nearby
companions. A sequence of images is acquired with an altitude/azimuth telescope
while the instrument field derotator is switched off. This keeps the instrument
and telescope optics aligned and allows the field of view to rotate with
respect to the instrument. For each image, a reference PSF is constructed from
other appropriately-selected images of the same sequence and subtracted to
remove quasi-static PSF structure. All residual images are then rotated to
align the field and are combined. Observed performances are reported for Gemini
North data. It is shown that quasi-static PSF noise can be reduced by a factor
\~5 for each image subtraction. The combination of all residuals then provides
an additional gain of the order of the square root of the total number of
acquired images. A total speckle noise attenuation of 20-50 is obtained for
one-hour long observing sequences compared to a single 30s exposure. A PSF
noise attenuation of 100 was achieved for two-hour long sequences of images of
Vega, reaching a 5-sigma contrast of 20 magnitudes for separations greater than
8". For a 30-minute long sequence, ADI achieves 30 times better signal-to-noise
than a classical observation technique. The ADI technique can be used with
currently available instruments to search for ~1MJup exoplanets with orbits of
radii between 50 and 300 AU around nearby young stars. The possibility of
combining the technique with other high-contrast imaging methods is briefly
discussed.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Constraining the orbit of the possible companion to Beta Pictoris: New deep imaging observations
We recently reported on the detection of a possible planetary-mass companion
to Beta Pictoris at a projected separation of 8 AU from the star, using data
taken in November 2003 with NaCo, the adaptive-optics system installed on the
Very Large Telescope UT4. Eventhough no second epoch detection was available,
there are strong arguments to favor a gravitationally bound companion rather
than a background object. If confirmed and located at a physical separation of
8 AU, this young, hot (~1500 K), massive Jovian companion (~8 Mjup) would be
the closest planet to its star ever imaged, could be formed via core-accretion,
and could explain the main morphological and dynamical properties of the dust
disk. Our goal was to return to Beta Pic five years later to obtain a
second-epoch observation of the companion or, in case of a non-detection,
constrain its orbit. Deep adaptive-optics L'-band direct images of Beta Pic and
Ks-band Four-Quadrant-Phase-Mask (4QPM) coronagraphic images were recorded with
NaCo in January and February 2009. We also use 4QPM data taken in November
2004. No point-like signal with the brightness of the companion candidate
(apparent magnitudes L'=11.2 or Ks ~ 12.5) is detected at projected distances
down to 6.5 AU from the star in the 2009 data. As expected, the non-detection
does not allow to rule out a background object; however, we show that it is
consistent with the orbital motion of a bound companion that got closer to the
star since first observed in 2003 and that is just emerging from behind the
star at the present epoch. We place strong constraints on the possible orbits
of the companion and discuss future observing prospects.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Effects of Quasi-Static Aberrations in Faint Companion Searches
We present the first results obtained at CFHT with the TRIDENT infrared
camera, dedicated to the detection of faint companions close to bright nearby
stars. The camera's main feature is the acquisition of three simultaneous
images in three wavelengths (simultaneous differential imaging) across the
methane absorption bandhead at 1.6 micron, that enables a precise subtraction
of the primary star PSF while keeping the companion signal. The main limitation
is non-common path aberrations between the three optical paths that slightly
decorrelate the PSFs. Two types of PSF calibrations are combined with the
differential simultaneous imaging technique to further attenuate the PSF:
reference star subtraction and instrument rotation to smooth aberrations. It is
shown that a faint companion with a DeltaH of 10 magnitudes would be detected
at 0.5 arcsec from the primary.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, to appear in Astronomy with High Contrast
Imaging, EAS Publications Serie
Direct Imaging of Multiple Planets Orbiting the Star HR 8799
Direct imaging of exoplanetary systems is a powerful technique that can
reveal Jupiter-like planets in wide orbits, can enable detailed
characterization of planetary atmospheres, and is a key step towards imaging
Earth-like planets. Imaging detections are challenging due to the combined
effect of small angular separation and large luminosity contrast between a
planet and its host star. High-contrast observations with the Keck and Gemini
telescopes have revealed three planets orbiting the star HR 8799, with
projected separations of 24, 38, and 68 astronomical units. Multi-epoch data
show counter-clockwise orbital motion for all three imaged planets. The low
luminosity of the companions and the estimated age of the system imply
planetary masses between 5 and 13 times that of Jupiter. This system resembles
a scaled-up version of the outer portion of our Solar System.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, Research Article published online in Science
Express Nov 13th, 200
Morphology of the very inclined debris disk around HD 32297
Direct imaging of circumstellar disks at high angular resolution is mandatory
to provide morphological information that bring constraints on their
properties, in particular the spatial distribution of dust. New techniques
combining observing strategy and data processing now allow very high contrast
imaging with 8-m class ground-based telescopes (10^-4 to 10^-5 at ~1") and
complement space telescopes while improving angular resolution at near infrared
wavelengths. We carried out a program at the VLT with NACO to image known
debris disks with higher angular resolution in the near IR than ever before in
order to study morphological properties and ultimately to detect signpost of
planets. The observing method makes use of advanced techniques: Adaptive
Optics, Coronagraphy and Differential Imaging, a combination designed to
directly image exoplanets with the upcoming generation of "planet finders" like
GPI (Gemini Planet Imager) and SPHERE (Spectro-Polarimetric High contrast
Exoplanet REsearch). Applied to extended objects like circumstellar disks, the
method is still successful but produces significant biases in terms of
photometry and morphology. We developed a new model-matching procedure to
correct for these biases and hence to bring constraints on the morphology of
debris disks. From our program, we present new images of the disk around the
star HD 32297 obtained in the H (1.6mic) and Ks (2.2mic) bands with an
unprecedented angular resolution (~65 mas). The images show an inclined thin
disk detected at separations larger than 0.5-0.6". The modeling stage confirms
a very high inclination (i=88{\deg}) and the presence of an inner cavity inside
r_0~110AU. We also found that the spine (line of maximum intensity along the
midplane) of the disk is curved and we attributed this feature to a large
anisotropic scattering factor (g~0.5, valid for an non-edge on disk). Abridged
...Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Photometric characterization of exoplanets using angular and spectral differential imaging
The direct detection of exoplanets has been the subject of intensive research
in the recent years. Data obtained with future high-contrast imaging
instruments optimized for giant planets direct detection are strongly limited
by the speckle noise. Specific observing strategies and data analysis methods,
such as angular and spectral differential imaging, are required to attenuate
the noise level and possibly detect the faint planet flux. Even though these
methods are very efficient at suppressing the speckles, the photometry of the
faint planets is dominated by the speckle residuals. The determination of the
effective temperature and surface gravity of the detected planets from
photometric measurements in different bands is then limited by the photometric
error on the planet flux. In this work we investigate this photometric error
and the consequences on the determination of the physical parameters of the
detected planets. We perform detailed end-to-end simulation with the CAOS-based
Software Package for SPHERE to obtain realistic data representing typical
observing sequences in Y, J, H and Ks bands with a high contrast imager. The
simulated data are used to measure the photometric accuracy as a function of
contrast for planets detected with angular and spectral+angular differential
methods. We apply this empirical accuracy to study the characterization
capabilities of a high-contrast differential imager. We show that the expected
photometric performances will allow the detection and characterization of
exoplanets down to the Jupiter mass at angular separations of 1.0" and 0.2"
respectively around high mass and low mass stars with 2 observations in
different filter pairs. We also show that the determination of the planets
physical parameters from photometric measurements in different filter pairs is
essentialy limited by the error on the determination of the surface gravity.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Imaging faint brown dwarf companions close to bright stars with a small, well-corrected telescope aperture
We have used our 1.6 m diameter off-axis well-corrected sub-aperture (WCS) on
the Palomar Hale telescope in concert with a small inner-working-angle (IWA)
phase-mask coronagraph to image the immediate environs of a small number of
nearby stars. Test cases included three stars (HD 130948, HD 49197 and HR7672)
with known brown dwarf companions at small separations, all of which were
detected. We also present the initial detection of a new object close to the
nearby young G0V star HD171488. Follow up observations are needed to determine
if this object is a bona fide companion, but its flux is consistent with the
flux of a young brown dwarf or low mass M star at the same distance as the
primary. Interestingly, at small angles our WCS coronagraph demonstrates a
limiting detectable contrast comparable to that of extant Lyot coronagraphs on
much larger telescopes corrected with current-generation AO systems. This
suggests that small apertures corrected to extreme adaptive optics (ExAO)
levels can be used to carry out initial surveys for close brown dwarf and
stellar companions, leaving followup observations for larger telescopes.Comment: accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
TRIDENT: an Infrared Differential Imaging Camera Optimized for the Detection of Methanated Substellar Companions
A near-infrared camera in use at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT)
and at the 1.6-m telescope of the Observatoire du Mont-Megantic is described.
The camera is based on a Hawaii-1 1024x1024 HgCdTe array detector. Its main
feature is to acquire three simultaneous images at three wavelengths across the
methane absorption bandhead at 1.6 microns, enabling, in theory, an accurate
subtraction of the stellar point spread function (PSF) and the detection of
faint close methanated companions. The instrument has no coronagraph and
features fast data acquisition, yielding high observing efficiency on bright
stars. The performance of the instrument is described, and it is illustrated by
laboratory tests and CFHT observations of the nearby stars GL526, Ups And and
Chi And. TRIDENT can detect (6 sigma) a methanated companion with delta H = 9.5
at 0.5" separation from the star in one hour of observing time. Non-common path
aberrations and amplitude modulation differences between the three optical
paths are likely to be the limiting factors preventing further PSF attenuation.
Instrument rotation and reference star subtraction improve the detection limit
by a factor of 2 and 4 respectively. A PSF noise attenuation model is presented
to estimate the non-common path wavefront difference effect on PSF subtraction
performance.Comment: 41 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
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