8,261 research outputs found

    Mid-infrared size survey of Young Stellar Objects: Description of Keck segment-tilting experiment and basic results

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    The mid-infrared properties of pre-planetary disks are sensitive to the temperature and flaring profiles of disks for the regions where planet formation is expected to occur. In order to constrain theories of planet formation, we have carried out a mid-infrared (wavelength 10.7 microns) size survey of young stellar objects using the segmented Keck telescope in a novel configuration. We introduced a customized pattern of tilts to individual mirror segments to allow efficient sparse-aperture interferometry, allowing full aperture synthesis imaging with higher calibration precision than traditional imaging. In contrast to previous surveys on smaller telescopes and with poorer calibration precision, we find most objects in our sample are partially resolved. Here we present the main observational results of our survey of 5 embedded massive protostars, 25 Herbig Ae/Be stars, 3 T Tauri stars, 1 FU Ori system, and 5 emission-line objects of uncertain classification. The observed mid-infrared sizes do not obey the size-luminosity relation found at near-infrared wavelengths and a companion paper will provide further modelling analysis of this sample. In addition, we report imaging results for a few of the most resolved objects, including complex emission around embedded massive protostars, the photoevaporating circumbinary disk around MWC 361A, and the subarcsecond binaries T Tau, FU Ori and MWC 1080.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysical Journal. 38 pages. 9 figure

    KOI-1003: A new spotted, eclipsing RS CVn binary in the Kepler field

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    Using the high-precision photometry from the Kepler space telescope, thousands of stars with stellar and planetary companions have been observed. The characterization of stars with companions is not always straightforward and can be contaminated by systematic and stellar influences on the light curves. Here, through a detailed analysis of starspots and eclipses, we identify KOI-1003 as a new, active RS CVn star---the first identified with data from Kepler. The Kepler light curve of this close binary system exhibits the system's primary transit, secondary eclipse, and starspot evolution of two persistent active longitudes. The near equality of the system's orbital and rotation periods indicates the orbit and primary star's rotation are nearly synchronized (Porb=8.360613±0.000003P_\mathrm{orb} = 8.360613\pm0.000003 days; Prot8.23P_\mathrm{rot} \sim 8.23 days). By assuming the secondary star is on the main sequence, we suggest the system consists of a 1.450.19+0.11 M1.45^{+0.11}_{-0.19} \ M_\odot subgiant primary and a 0.590.04+0.03 M0.59^{+0.03}_{-0.04} \ M_\odot main-sequence companion. Our work gives a distance of 4400±6004400 \pm 600 pc and an age of t=3.0+2.00.5t = 3.0^{-0.5}_{+2.0} Gyr, parameters which are discrepant with previous studies that included the star as a member of the open cluster NGC 6791.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures, accepted to Ap

    The inner regions of protoplanetary disks

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    To understand how planetary systems form in the dusty disks around pre-main-sequence stars a detailed knowledge of the structure and evolution of these disks is required. While this is reasonably well understood for the regions of the disk beyond about 1 AU, the structure of these disks inward of 1 AU remains a puzzle. This is partly because it is very difficult to spatially resolve these regions with current telescopes. But it is also because the physics of this region, where the disk becomes so hot that the dust starts to evaporate, is poorly understood. With infrared interferometry it has become possible in recent years to directly spatially resolve the inner AU of protoplanetary disks, albeit in a somewhat limited way. These observations have partly confirmed current models of these regions, but also posed new questions and puzzles. Moreover, it has turned out that the numerical modeling of these regions is extremely challenging. In this review we give a rough overview of the history and recent developments in this exciting field of astrophysics.Comment: 45 pages with 14 Figures. to appear in Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics (2010, Vol. 48
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