215 research outputs found
Fixed-delay Interferometry for Doppler Extra-solar Planet Detection
We present a new technique based on fixed-delay interferometry for high
throughput, high precision and multi-object Doppler radial velocity (RV)
surveys for extra-solar planets. The Doppler measurements are conducted through
monitoring the stellar fringe phase shifts of the interferometer. High Doppler
sensitivity is achieved through optimizing the optical delay in the
interferometer and reducing photon noise by measuring multiple fringes over a
broadband. This broadband operation is performed through coupling the
interferometer with a low to medium resolution post-disperser. The total
Doppler sensitivity of this approach is, in theory, independent of dispersing
power of the post-disperser, which allows development of new generation RV
machines with much reduced size, high stability and low cost compared to
echelles. This technique has the potential to improve RV survey efficiency by
2-3 orders of magnitude over cross-dispersed echelle spectroscopy approach to
allow a full sky RV survey for planets once the instrument is operated as a
multi-object instrument and optimized for high throughput.
The simple interferometer response potentially allows this technique to be
operated at other wavelengths independent of popular iodine reference sources
to search for planets around early type stars, white dwarfs, and M, L and T
dwarfs for the first time.Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letters for publication, 11 pages, 2 figure
Measuring Stellar Radial Velocities with a Dispersed Fixed-Delay Interferometer
We demonstrate the ability to measure precise stellar barycentric radial
velocities with the dispersed fixed-delay interferometer technique using the
Exoplanet Tracker (ET), an instrument primarily designed for precision
differential Doppler velocity measurements using this technique. Our
barycentric radial velocities, derived from observations taken at the KPNO 2.1
meter telescope, differ from those of Nidever et al. by 0.047 km/s (rms) when
simultaneous iodine calibration is used, and by 0.120 km/s (rms) without
simultaneous iodine calibration. Our results effectively show that a Michelson
interferometer coupled to a spectrograph allows precise measurements of
barycentric radial velocities even at a modest spectral resolution of R ~ 5100.
A multi-object version of the ET instrument capable of observing ~500 stars per
night is being used at the Sloan 2.5 m telescope at Apache Point Observatory
for the Multi-object APO Radial Velocity Exoplanet Large-area Survey (MARVELS),
a wide-field radial velocity survey for extrasolar planets around TYCHO-2 stars
in the magnitude range 7.6<V<12. In addition to precise differential
velocities, this survey will also yield precise barycentric radial velocities
for many thousands of stars using the data analysis techniques reported here.
Such a large kinematic survey at high velocity precision will be useful in
identifying the signature of accretion events in the Milky Way and
understanding local stellar kinematics in addition to discovering exoplanets,
brown dwarfs and spectroscopic binaries.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
An Overview of the Palomar Transient Factory Pipeline and Archive at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center
The Palomar Transient Factory is conducting a wide-field, variable-cadence optical survey of the northern sky to detect transient, variable, and moving objects. As a member of the PTF collaboration, the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center has developed an image archive, a high-quality photometry pipeline, and a searchable database of detected astronomical sources. The system is capable of processing and storing 300 Gbytes of data per night over the course of the 5-year survey. With an expected total of ~ 20 billion rows, the table containing sources extracted from PTF images will be among the largest astronomical databases ever created. The survey is efficiently discovering transient sources from asteroids to supernovae, and will inform the development of future sky surveys like that of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
First observations of SPEAR-induced artificial backscatter from CUTLASS and the EISCAT Svalbard radars
Results are presented from the first two active experimental campaigns undertaken by the new SPEAR (Space Plasma Exploration by Active Radar) high-power system that has recently become operational on Spitzbergen, in the Svalbard archipelago. SPEAR's high-power beam was used to excite artificial enhancements in the backscatter detected by the ESR (EISCAT Svalbard Radar) parallel to the geomagnetic field, as well as coherent backscatter detected by both of the CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin Located Auroral Sounding System) coherent radars, in directions orthogonal to the geomagnetic field. The ESR detected both enhanced ion-lines as well as enhanced plasma-lines, that were sustained for the whole period when SPEAR was transmitting ordinary mode radio waves, at frequencies below the maximum F-region plasma frequency. On a number of occasions, coherent backscatter was also observed in one or in both of the CUTLASS radars, in beams that intersected the heated volume. Although the levels of enhanced backscatter varied considerably in time, it appeared that ion-line, plasma-line and coherent backscatter were all excited simultaneously, in contrast to what has typically been reported at Troms&#248;, during EISCAT heater operations. A description of the technical and operational aspects of the new SPEAR system is also included
The Palomar Transient Factory photometric catalog 1.0
We construct a photometrically calibrated catalog of non-variable sources
from the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) observations. The first version of
this catalog presented here, the PTF photometric catalog 1.0, contains
calibrated R_PTF-filter magnitudes for about 21 million sources brighter than
magnitude 19, over an area of about 11233 deg^2. The magnitudes are provided in
the PTF photometric system, and the color of a source is required in order to
convert these magnitudes into other magnitude systems. We estimate that the
magnitudes in this catalog have typical accuracy of about 0.02 mag with respect
to magnitudes from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The median repeatability of
our catalog's magnitudes for stars between 15 and 16 mag, is about 0.01 mag,
and it is better than 0.03 mag for 95% of the sources in this magnitude range.
The main goal of this catalog is to provide reference magnitudes for
photometric calibration of visible light observations. Subsequent versions of
this catalog, which will be published incrementally online, will be extended to
a larger sky area and will also include g_PTF-filter magnitudes, as well as
variability and proper motion information.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, PASP in pres
The First Extrasolar Planet Discovered with a New Generation High Throughput Doppler Instrument
We report the detection of the first extrasolar planet, ET-1 (HD 102195b),
using the Exoplanet Tracker (ET), a new generation Doppler instrument. The
planet orbits HD 102195, a young star with solar metallicity that may be part
of the local association. The planet imparts radial velocity variability to the
star with a semiamplitude of m s and a period of 4.11 days.
The planetary minimum mass () is .Comment: 42 pages, 11 figures and 5 tables, Accepted for publication in Ap
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