436 research outputs found
Multiperiodic Galactic field RR Lyrae stars in the ASAS catalog
The All Sky Automated Survey (ASAS) monitors bright stars (8 mag < V < 14
mag) south of declination +28 deg. The ASAS Catalogue of Variable Stars (ACVS)
presently contains 50,099 objects; among them are 2212 objects classified as RR
Lyrae pulsating variables. We use ASAS photometric V band data to search for
multiperiodicity in those stars. We find that 73 of 1435 RRab stars and 49 of
756 RRc stars exhibit the Blazhko effect. We observe a deficiency of RRab
Blazhko variables with main pulsation periods greater than 0.65 days. The
Blazhko periods of RRc stars exhibit a strongly bimodal distribution. During
our study we discovered the Blazhko effect with multiple periods in object ASAS
050747-3351.9 = SU Col. Blazhko periods of 89.3 d and 65.8 d and a candidate of
29.5 d were identified with periodogram peaks near the first three harmonics of
the main pulsation. These observations may inspire new models of the Blazhko
effect, which has eluded a consistent theory since its discovery about one
hundred years ago. Long term lightcurve changes were found in 29 stars. We also
found 19 Galactic double mode pulsators (RRd), of which 4 are new discoveries,
raising the number of ASAS discoveries of such objects to 16, out of 27 known
in the field of our Galaxy.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, published in MNRA
Are the Kepler Near-Resonance Planet Pairs due to Tidal Dissipation?
The multiple-planet systems discovered by the Kepler mission show an excess
of planet pairs with period ratios just wide of exact commensurability for
first-order resonances like 2:1 and 3:2. In principle, these planet pairs could
have both resonance angles associated with the resonance librating if the
orbital eccentricities are sufficiently small, because the width of first-order
resonances diverges in the limit of vanishingly small eccentricity. We consider
a widely-held scenario in which pairs of planets were captured into first-order
resonances by migration due to planet-disk interactions, and subsequently
became detached from the resonances, due to tidal dissipation in the planets.
In the context of this scenario, we find a constraint on the ratio of the
planet's tidal dissipation function and Love number that implies that some of
the Kepler planets are likely solid. However, tides are not strong enough to
move many of the planet pairs to the observed separations, suggesting that
additional dissipative processes are at play.Comment: 20 pages, including 7 figures; accepted for publication in Ap
The Rotation Period of the Planet-Hosting Star HD 189733
We present synoptic optical photometry of HD 189733, the chromospherically
active parent star of one of the most intensively studied exoplanets. We have
significantly extended the timespan of our previously reported observations and
refined the estimate of the stellar rotation period by more than an order of
magnitude: days. We derive a lower limit on the
inclination of the stellar rotation axis of 56\arcdeg (with 95% confidence),
corroborating earlier evidence that the stellar spin axis and planetary orbital
axis are well aligned.Comment: To appear in A
The Short Rotation Period of Hi'iaka, Haumea's Largest Satellite
Hi'iaka is the larger outer satellite of the dwarf planet Haumea. Using
relative photometry from the Hubble Space Telescope and Magellan and a phase
dispersion minimization analysis, we have identified the rotation period of
Hi'iaka to be ~9.8 hrs (double-peaked). This is ~120 times faster than its
orbital period, creating new questions about the formation of this system and
possible tidal evolution. The rapid rotation suggests that Hi'iaka could have a
significant obliquity and spin precession that could be visible in light curves
within a few years. We then turn to an investigation of what we learn about the
(presently unclear) formation of the Haumea system and family based on this
unexpectedly rapid rotation rate. We explore the importance of the initial
semi-major axis and rotation period in tidal evolution theory and find they
strongly influence the time required to despin to synchronous rotation,
relevant to understanding a wide variety of satellite and binary systems. We
find that despinning tides do not necessarily lead to synchronous spin periods
for Hi'iaka, even if it formed near the Roche limit. Therefore the short
rotation period of Hi'iaka does not rule out significant tidal evolution.
Hi'iaka's spin period is also consistent with formation near its current
location and spin up due to Haumea-centric impactors.Comment: 21 pages with 6 figures, to be published in The Astronomical Journa
Transit Timing Observations from Kepler: VII. Confirmation of 27 planets in 13 multiplanet systems via Transit Timing Variations and orbital stability
We confirm 27 planets in 13 planetary systems by showing the existence of
statistically significant anti-correlated transit timing variations (TTVs),
which demonstrates that the planet candidates are in the same system, and
long-term dynamical stability, which places limits on the masses of the
candidates---showing that they are planetary. %This overall method of planet
confirmation was first applied to \kepler systems 23 through 32. All of these
newly confirmed planetary systems have orbital periods that place them near
first-order mean motion resonances (MMRs), including 6 systems near the 2:1
MMR, 5 near 3:2, and one each near 4:3, 5:4, and 6:5. In addition, several
unconfirmed planet candidates exist in some systems (that cannot be confirmed
with this method at this time). A few of these candidates would also be near
first order MMRs with either the confirmed planets or with other candidates.
One system of particular interest, Kepler-56 (KOI-1241), is a pair of planets
orbiting a 12th magnitude, giant star with radius over three times that of the
Sun and effective temperature of 4900 K---among the largest stars known to host
a transiting exoplanetary system.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to MNRA
The orbits of the quadruple star system 88 Tau A from PHASES differential astrometry and radial velocity
We have used high precision differential astrometry from the Palomar
High-precision Astrometric Search for Exoplanet Systems (PHASES) project and
radial velocity measurements covering a time-span of 20 years to determine the
orbital parameters of the 88 Tau A system. 88 Tau is a complex hierarchical
multiple system comprising a total of six stars; we have studied the brightest
4, consisting of two short-period pairs orbiting each other with an 18-year
period. We present the first orbital solution for one of the short-period
pairs, and determine the masses of the components and distance to the system to
the level of a few percent. In addition, our astrometric measurements allow us
to make the first determination of the mutual inclinations of the orbits. We
find that the sub-systems are not coplanar.Comment: Corrected Author Ordering; 12 Pages, Accepted for publication in Ap
The Origin of Systems of Tightly Packed Inner Planets with Misaligned, Ultra-short-period Companions
Ultra-short-period planets provide a window into the inner edge of the parameter space occupied by planetary orbits. In one particularly intriguing class of multiplanet systems, the ultra-short-period planet is flanked by short-period companions, and the outer planets occupy a discernibly distinct dynamical state. In the observational database, this phenomenon is represented by a small number of stars hosting systems of tightly packed coplanar planets as well as an ultra-short-period planet, whose orbit is misaligned relative to the mutual plane of the former. In this work, we explore two different mechanisms that can produce an ultra-short-period planet that is misaligned with the rest of its compact planetary system: natural decoupling between the inner and outer system via the stellar quadrupole moment, and decoupling forced by an external companion with finely tuned orbital parameters. These two processes operate with different timescales, and can thus occur simultaneously. In this work, we use the K2-266 system as an illustrative example to elucidate the dynamics of these two processes, and highlight the types of constraints that may arise regarding the dynamical histories of systems hosting ultra-short-period planets
Multiple-Planet Scattering and the Origin of Hot Jupiters
Exoplanets show a pile-up of Jupiter-size planets in orbits with a 3-day
period. A fraction of these hot Jupiters have retrograde orbits with respect to
the parent star's rotation. To explain these observations we performed a series
of numerical integrations of planet scattering followed by the tidal
circularization. We considered planetary systems having 3 and 4 planets
initially. We found that the standard Kozai migration is an inefficient
mechanism for the formation of hot Jupiters.
Our results show the formation of two distinct populations of hot Jupiters.
The inner population of hot Jupiters with semimajor axis a < 0.03 AU formed in
the systems where no planetary ejections occurred. This group contained a
significant fraction of highly inclined and retrograde orbits, with
distributions largely independent of the initial setup. However, our follow-up
integrations showed that this populations was transient with most planets
falling inside the Roche radius of the star in <1 Gyr. The outer population of
hot Jupiters formed in systems where at least one planet was ejected. This
population survived the effects of tides over >1 Gyr. The semimajor axis
distribution of Population II fits nicely the observed 3-day pile-up.
The inclination distribution of the outer hot planets depends on the number
of planets in the initial systems and the 4-planet case showed a larger
proportion (up to 10%), and a wider spread in inclination values. As the later
results roughly agrees with observations, this may suggest that the planetary
systems with observed hot Jupiters were originally rich in the number of
planets, some of which were ejected. In a broad perspective, our work therefore
hints on an unexpected link between the hot Jupiters and recently discovered
free floating planets.Comment: submitted to Ap
The architecture of the hierarchical triple star KOI 928 from eclipse timing variations seen in Kepler photometry
We present a hierarchical triple star system (KIC 9140402) where a low mass
eclipsing binary orbits a more massive third star. The orbital period of the
binary (4.98829 Days) is determined by the eclipse times seen in photometry
from NASA's Kepler spacecraft. The periodically changing tidal field, due to
the eccentric orbit of the binary about the tertiary, causes a change in the
orbital period of the binary. The resulting eclipse timing variations provide
insight into the dynamics and architecture of this system and allow the
inference of the total mass of the binary ()
and the orbital parameters of the binary about the central star.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS Letters. Additional tables with eclipse times are
included here. The Kepler data that was used for the analysis of this system
(Q1 through Q6) will be available on MAST after June 27, 201
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