8 research outputs found
Time variation of Kepler transits induced by stellar spots - a way to distinguish between prograde and retrograde motion. II. Application to KOIs
Mazeh, Holczer, and Shporer (2015) have presented an approach that can, in
principle, use the derived transit timing variation (TTV) of some transiting
planets observed by the mission to distinguish between prograde and
retrograde motion of their orbits with respect to their parent stars' rotation.
The approach utilizes TTVs induced by spot-crossing events that occur when the
planet moves across a spot on the stellar surface, looking for a correlation
between the derived TTVs and the stellar brightness derivatives at the
corresponding transits. This can work even in data that cannot temporally
resolve the spot-crossing events themselves. Here we apply this approach to the
KOIs, identifying nine systems where the photometric spot modulation
is large enough and the transit timing accurate enough to allow detection of a
TTV-brightness-derivatives correlation. Of those systems five show highly
significant prograde motion (Kepler-17b, Kepler-71b, KOI-883.01, KOI-895.01,
and KOI-1074.01), while no system displays retrograde motion, consistent with
the suggestion that planets orbiting cool stars have prograde motion. All five
systems have impact parameter , and all systems
within that impact parameter range show significant correlation, except
HAT-P-11b where the lack of a correlation follows its large stellar obliquity.
Our search suffers from an observational bias against detection of high impact
parameter cases, and the detected sample is extremely small. Nevertheless, our
findings may suggest that stellar spots, or at least the larger ones, tend to
be located at a low stellar latitude, but not along the stellar equator,
similar to the Sun.Comment: V2: accepted to Ap
SDSS-III: Massive Spectroscopic Surveys of the Distant Universe, the Milky Way Galaxy, and Extra-Solar Planetary Systems
Building on the legacy of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-I and II),
SDSS-III is a program of four spectroscopic surveys on three scientific themes:
dark energy and cosmological parameters, the history and structure of the Milky
Way, and the population of giant planets around other stars. In keeping with
SDSS tradition, SDSS-III will provide regular public releases of all its data,
beginning with SDSS DR8 (which occurred in Jan 2011). This paper presents an
overview of the four SDSS-III surveys. BOSS will measure redshifts of 1.5
million massive galaxies and Lya forest spectra of 150,000 quasars, using the
BAO feature of large scale structure to obtain percent-level determinations of
the distance scale and Hubble expansion rate at z<0.7 and at z~2.5. SEGUE-2,
which is now completed, measured medium-resolution (R=1800) optical spectra of
118,000 stars in a variety of target categories, probing chemical evolution,
stellar kinematics and substructure, and the mass profile of the dark matter
halo from the solar neighborhood to distances of 100 kpc. APOGEE will obtain
high-resolution (R~30,000), high signal-to-noise (S/N>100 per resolution
element), H-band (1.51-1.70 micron) spectra of 10^5 evolved, late-type stars,
measuring separate abundances for ~15 elements per star and creating the first
high-precision spectroscopic survey of all Galactic stellar populations (bulge,
bar, disks, halo) with a uniform set of stellar tracers and spectral
diagnostics. MARVELS will monitor radial velocities of more than 8000 FGK stars
with the sensitivity and cadence (10-40 m/s, ~24 visits per star) needed to
detect giant planets with periods up to two years, providing an unprecedented
data set for understanding the formation and dynamical evolution of giant
planet systems. (Abridged)Comment: Revised to version published in The Astronomical Journa
Procurement and inventory systems analysis/ Banks
xii, 292 hal.: ill.; 26 cm
Systems engineering and analysis, 2nd.ed./ Blanchard
xiii, 721 hal.: ill.; 25 cm
Systems engineering and analysis, 2nd.ed./ Blanchard
xiii, 721 hal.: ill.; 25 cm
Revisiting and refining the model of TRAPPIST-1 with Spitzer
Spitzer Proposal ID #14223With the Spitzer Space Telescope, we have discovered a system of seven transiting planets about the star TRAPPIST-1, and for the first time measured the densities of three Earth-sized, temperate exoplanets using transit-timing variations (Gillon et al. 2017; Ducrot et al. 2018; Grimm et al. 2018). We propose to gather additional transits of the TRAPPIST-1 system, focusing on the outer planets in the system which have had fewer transits observed to date. The four-fold goals of this proposal are: i). to flag potential transits which might be affected by stellar variability; ii). to constrain the dynamical state of the planet system; iii). to better constrain the masses of the planets; iv). to tighten the ephemeris forecast for observations with JWST. In addition, we will search for any evidence an eighth planet, characterize the stellar variability, and forecast planet-planet overlaps during transits. The proposed observations contain measurements which are only possible in March-April 2019, and so we request a time critical review to the extent possible
The Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE):Second data release
We present the second data release of the Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE),
an ambitious spectroscopic survey to measure radial velocities (RVs) and
stellar atmosphere parameters of up to one million stars using the 6dF
multi-object spectrograph on the 1.2-m UK Schmidt Telescope of the
Anglo-Australian Observatory (AAO). It is obtaining medium resolution spectra
(median R=7,500) in the Ca-triplet region (8,410--8,795 \AA) for southern
hemisphere stars in the magnitude range 9<I<12. Following the first data
release (Steinmetz et al. 2006) the current release doubles the sample of
published RVs, now containing 51,829 RVs for 49,327 individual stars observed
on 141 nights between April 11 2003 and March 31 2005. Comparison with external
data sets shows that the new data collected since April 3 2004 show a standard
deviation of 1.3 km/s, about twice better than for the first data release. For
the first time this data release contains values of stellar parameters from
22,407 spectra of 21,121 individual stars. They were derived by a penalized
\chi^2 method using an extensive grid of synthetic spectra calculated from the
latest version of Kurucz models. From comparison with external data sets, our
conservative estimates of errors of the stellar parameters (for a spectrum with
S/N=40) are 400 K in temperature, 0.5 dex in gravity, and 0.2 dex in
metallicity. We note however that the internal errors estimated from repeat
RAVE observations of 822 stars are at least a factor 2 smaller. We demonstrate
that the results show no systematic offsets if compared to values derived from
photometry or complementary spectroscopic analyses. The data release includes
proper motion and photometric measurements. It can be accessed via the RAVE
webpage: http://www.rave-survey.org and through CDS.