683 research outputs found
Pupil stabilization for SPHERE's extreme AO and high performance coronagraph system
We propose a new concept of pupil motion sensor for astronomical adaptive
optics systems and present experimental results obtained during the first
laboratory validation of this concept. Pupil motion is an important issue in
the case of extreme adaptive optics, high contrast systems, such as the
proposed Planet Finder instruments for the ESO and Gemini 8-meter telescopes.
Such high contrast imaging instruments will definitively require pupil
stabilization to minimize the effect of quasi-static aberrations. The concept
for pupil stabilization we propose uses the flux information from the AO system
wave-front sensor to drive in closed loop a pupil tip-tilt mirror located in a
focal plane. A laboratory experiment validates this concept and demonstrates
its interest for high contrast imaging instrument.Comment: This paper was published in Optics Express and is made available as
an electronic reprint with the permission of OSA. The paper can be found at
http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm?id=144687 on the OSA websit
beta Pic b position relative to the Debris Disk
Context. We detected in 2009 a giant, close-by planet orbiting {\beta} Pic, a
young star surrounded with a disk, extensively studied for more than 20 years.
We showed that if located on an inclined orbit, the planet could explain
several peculiarities of {\beta} Pictoris system. However, the available data
did not permit to measure the inclination of {\beta} Pic b with respect to the
disk, and in particular to establish in which component of the disk - the main,
extended disk or the inner inclined component/disk-, the planet was located.
Comparison between the observed planet position and the disk orientation
measured on previous imaging data was not an option because of potential biases
in the measurements. Aims. Our aim is to measure precisely the planet location
with respect to the dust disk using a single high resolution image, and
correcting for systematics or errors that degrades the precision of the disk
and planet relative position measurements. Methods. We gathered new NaCo data
at Ks band, with a set-up optimized to derive simultaneously the orientation(s)
of the disk(s) and that of the planet. Results. We show that the projected
position of {\beta} Pic b is above the midplane of the main disk. With the
current data and knowledge on the system, this implies that {\beta} Pic b
cannot be located in the main disk. The data rather suggest the planet being
located in the inclined component.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Collisional Cascades in Planetesimal Disks II. Embedded Planets
We use a multiannulus planetesimal accretion code to investigate the growth
of icy planets in the outer regions of a planetesimal disk. In a quiescent
minimum mass solar nebula, icy planets grow to sizes of 1000--3000 km on a
timescale t = 15-20 Myr (a/30 AU)^3 where a is the distance from the central
star. Planets form faster in more massive nebulae. Newly-formed planets stir up
leftover planetesimals along their orbits and produce a collisional cascade
where icy planetesimals are slowly ground to dust.
The dusty debris of planet formation has physical characteristics similar to
those observed in beta Pic, HR 4796A, and other debris disks. We derive dust
masses for small particles, 1 mm and smaller, and large particles, 1 mm and
larger, as a function of the initial conditions in the planetesimal disk. The
dust luminosities derived from these masses are similar to those observed in
Vega, HR 4796A, and other debris disks. The calculations produce bright rings
and dark gaps. Bright rings occur where 1000 km and larger planets have
recently formed. Dark gaps are regions where planets have cleared out dust or
shadows where planets have yet to form.Comment: to be published in the Astronomical Journal, January 2004; 7 pages of
text; 17 figures at
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kenyon/pf/emb-planet-figures.pdf; 2 animations at
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kenyon/pf/emb-planet-movies.htm
Rings in the Planetesimal Disk of Beta Pic
The nearby main sequence star Beta Pictoris is surrounded by an edge-on disk
of dust produced by the collisional erosion of larger planetesimals. Here we
report the discovery of substructure within the northeast extension of the disk
midplane that may represent an asymmetric ring system around Beta Pic. We
present a dynamical model showing that a close stellar flyby with a quiescient
disk of planetesimals can create such rings, along with previously unexplained
disk asymmetries. Thus we infer that Beta Pic's planetesimal disk was highly
disrupted by a stellar encounter in the last hundred thousand years.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letters. LaTeX, 13 pages, 4 figures, full PostScript
file available from http://www.maths.qmw.ac.uk/~jdl
Analysis of ground-based differential imager performance
In the context of extrasolar planet direct detection, we evaluated the
performance of differential imaging with ground-based telescopes. This study
was carried out in the framework of the VLT-Planet Finder project and is
further extended to the case of Extremely Large Telescopes. Our analysis is
providing critical specifications for future instruments mostly in terms of
phase aberrations but also regarding alignments of the instrument optics or
offset pointing on the coronagraph. It is found that Planet Finder projects on
8m class telescopes can be successful at detecting Extrasolar Giant Planets
providing phase aberrations, alignments and pointing are accurately controlled.
The situation is more pessimistic for the detection of terrestrial planets with
Extremely Large Telescopes for which phase aberrations must be lowered at a
very challenging level
A giant planet imaged in the disk of the young star Beta Pictoris
Here we show that the ~10 Myr Beta Pictoris system hosts a massive giant
planet, Beta Pictoris b, located 8 to 15 AU from the star. This result confirms
that gas giant planets form rapidly within disks and validates the use of disk
structures as fingerprints of embedded planets. Among the few planets already
imaged, Beta Pictoris b is the closest to its parent star. Its short period
could allow recording the full orbit within 17 years.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Published online 10 June 2010;
10.1126/science.1187187. To appear in Scienc
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
NICMOS Imaging of the HR 4796A Circumstellar Disk
We report the first near infrared (NIR) imaging of a circumstellar annular
disk around the young (~8 Myr), Vega-like star, HR 4796A. NICMOS coronagraph
observations at 1.1 and 1.6 microns reveal a ring-like symmetrical structure
peaking in reflected intensity 1.05 arcsec +/- 0.02 arcsec (~ 70 AU) from the
central A0V star. The ring geometry, with an inclination of 73.1 deg +/- 1.2
deg and a major axis PA of 26.8 deg +/- 0.6 deg, is in good agreement with
recent 12.5 and 20.8 micron observations of a truncated disk (Koerner, et al.
1998). The ring is resolved with a characteristic width of less than 0.26
arcsec (17 AU) and appears abruptly truncated at both the inner and outer
edges. The region of the disk-plane inward of ~60 AU appears to be relatively
free of scattering material. The integrated flux density of the part of the
disk that is visible (greater than 0.65 arcsec from the star) is found to be
7.5 +/- 0.5 mJy and 7.4 +/- 1.2 mJy at 1.1 and 1.6 microns, respectively.
Correcting for the unseen area of the ring yields total flux densities of 12.8
+/- 1.0 mJy and 12.5 +/- 2.0 mJy, respectively (Vega magnitudes = 12.92 /+-
0.08 and 12.35 +/-0.18). The NIR luminosity ratio is evaluated from these
results and ground-based photometry of the star. At these wavelengths
Ldisk(lambda)/L*(lambda) = 1.4 +/- 0.2E-3 and 2.4 +/- 0.5E-3, giving reasonable
agreement between the stellar flux scattered in the NIR and that which is
absorbed in the visible and re-radiated in the thermal infrared. The somewhat
red reflectance of the disk at these wavelengths implies mean particle sizes in
excess of several microns, larger than typical interstellar grains. The
confinement of material to a relatively narrow annular zone implies dynamical
constraints on the disk particles by one or more as yet unseen bodies.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure for associated gif file see:
http://nicmosis.as.arizona.edu:8000/AAS99/FIGURE1_HR4796A_ApJL.gif . Accepted
13 January 1999, Astrophyical Journal Letter
Collisional Cascades in Planetesimal Disks I. Stellar Flybys
We use a new multiannulus planetesimal accretion code to investigate the
evolution of a planetesimal disk following a moderately close encounter with a
passing star. The calculations include fragmentation, gas and
Poynting-Robertson drag, and velocity evolution from dynamical friction and
viscous stirring. We assume that the stellar encounter increases planetesimal
velocities to the shattering velocity, initiating a collisional cascade in the
disk. During the early stages of our calculations, erosive collisions damp
particle velocities and produce substantial amounts of dust. For a wide range
of initial conditions and input parameters, the time evolution of the dust
luminosity follows a simple relation, L_d/L_{\star} = L_0 / [alpha +
(t/t_d)^{beta}]. The maximum dust luminosity L_0 and the damping time t_d
depend on the disk mass, with L_0 proportional to M_d and t_d proportional to
M_d^{-1}. For disks with dust masses of 1% to 100% of the `minimum mass solar
nebula' (1--100 earth masses at 30--150 AU), our calculations yield t_d approx
1--10 Myr, alpha approx 1--2, beta = 1, and dust luminosities similar to the
range observed in known `debris disk' systems, L_0 approx 10^{-3} to 10^{-5}.
Less massive disks produce smaller dust luminosities and damp on longer
timescales. Because encounters with field stars are rare, these results imply
that moderately close stellar flybys cannot explain collisional cascades in
debris disk systems with stellar ages of 100 Myr or longer.Comment: 33 pages of text, 12 figures, and an animation. The paper will appear
in the March 2002 issue of the Astronmomical Journal. The animation and a
copy of the paper with full resolution figures are at S. Kenyon's planet
formation website: http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kenyon/p
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