289 research outputs found
Subarcsecond mid-infrared and radio observations of the W3 IRS5 protocluster
Observations at mid-infrared (4.8-17.65 um) and radio (0.7-1.3 cm)
wavelengths are used to constrain the structure of the high-mass star-forming
region W3 IRS5 on 0.1'' (200 AU) scales. Two bright mid-infrared sources are
detected, as well as diffuse emission. The bright sources have associated
compact radio emission and probably are young high-mass stars.
The measured sizes and estimated temperatures indicate that these sources
together can supply the observed far-infrared luminosity. However, an optically
thick radio source with a possible mid-infrared counterpart may also contribute
significant luminosity; if so, it must be extremely deeply embedded.
The infrared colour temperatures of 350-390 K and low radio brightness
suggest gravitational confinement of the H II regions and ongoing accretion at
a rate of a few 10^-8 M0/yr or more. Variations in the accretion rate would
explain the observed radio variability. The low estimated foreground extinction
suggests the existence of a cavity around the central stars, perhaps blown by
stellar winds.
At least three radio sources without mid-infrared counterparts appear to show
proper motions of ~100 km/s, and may be deeply embedded young runaway OB stars,
but more likely are clumps in the ambient material which are shock-ionized by
the OB star winds.Comment: Accepted by A&A; 14 pages, 7 b/w figure
The last gasps of VY CMa: Aperture synthesis and adaptive optics imagery
We present new observations of the red supergiant VY CMa at 1.25 micron, 1.65
micron, 2.26 micron, 3.08 micron and 4.8 micron. Two complementary
observational techniques were utilized: non-redundant aperture masking on the
10-m Keck-I telescope yielding images of the innermost regions at unprecedented
resolution, and adaptive optics imaging on the ESO 3.6-m telescope at La Silla
attaining extremely high (~10^5) peak-to-noise dynamic range over a wide field.
For the first time the inner dust shell has been resolved in the near-infrared
to reveal a one-sided extension of circumstellar emission within 0.1" (~15
R_star) of the star. The line-of-sight optical depths of the circumstellar dust
shell at 1.65 micron, 2.26 micron, and 3.08 micron have been estimated to be
1.86 +/- 0.42, 0.85 +/- 0.20, and 0.44 +/- 0.11. These new results allow the
bolometric luminosity of VY~CMa to be estimated independent of the dust shell
geometry, yielding L_star ~ 2x10^5 L_sun. A variety of dust condensations,
including a large scattering plume and a bow-shaped dust feature, were observed
in the faint, extended nebula up to 4" from the central source. While the
origin of the nebulous plume remains uncertain, a geometrical model is
developed assuming the plume is produced by radially-driven dust grains forming
at a rotating flow insertion point with a rotational period between 1200-4200
years, which is perhaps the stellar rotational period or the orbital period of
an unseen companion.Comment: 25 pages total with 1 table and 5 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical
Journal (to appear in February 1999
Near and mid-IR sub-arcsecond structure of the dusty symbiotic star R Aqr
The results of a high-resolution interferometric campaign targeting the
symbiotic long-period variable (LPV) R~Aqr are reported. With both
near-infrared measurements on baselines out to 10m and mid-infrared data
extending to 32m, we have been able to measure the characteristic sizes of
regions from the photosphere of the LPV and its extended molecular atmosphere,
out to the cooler circumstellar dust shell. The near-infrared data were taken
using aperture masking interferometry on the Keck-I telescope and show R~Aqr to
be partially resolved for wavelengths out to 2.2 microns but with a marked
enlargement, possibly due to molecular opacity, at 3.1 microns. Mid-infrared
interferometric measurements were obtained with the U.C. Berkeley Infrared
Spatial Interferometer (ISI) operating at 11.15 microns from 1992 to 1999.
Although this dataset is somewhat heterogeneous with incomplete coverage of the
Fourier plane and sampling of the pulsation cycle, clear changes in the
mid-infrared brightness distribution were observed, both as a function of
position angle on the sky and as a function of pulsation phase. Spherically
symmetric radiative transfer calculations of uniform-outflow dust shell models
produce brightness distributions and spectra which partially explain the data,
however limitations to this approximation are noted. Evidence for significant
deviation from circular symmetry was found in the mid-infrared and more
tentatively at 3.08 microns in the near-infrared, however no clear detection of
binarity or of non-LPV elements in the symbiotic system is reported.Comment: Accepted to Astrophysical Journal. To appear in volume 534. 14 pages;
3 postscript figure
A close halo of large transparent grains around extreme red giant stars
Intermediate-mass stars end their lives by ejecting the bulk of their
envelope via a slow dense wind back into the interstellar medium, to form the
next generation of stars and planets. Stellar pulsations are thought to elevate
gas to an altitude cool enough for the condensation of dust, which is then
accelerated by radiation pressure from starlight, entraining the gas and
driving the wind. However accounting for the mass loss has been a problem due
to the difficulty in observing tenuous gas and dust tens of milliarcseconds
from the star, and there is accordingly no consensus on the way sufficient
momentum is transferred from the starlight to the outflow. Here, we present
spatially-resolved, multi-wavelength observations of circumstellar dust shells
of three stars on the asymptotic giant branch of the HR diagram. When imaged in
scattered light, dust shells were found at remarkably small radii (<~ 2 stellar
radii) and with unexpectedly large grains (~300 nm radius). This proximity to
the photosphere argues for dust species that are transparent to starlight and
therefore resistant to sublimation by the intense radiation field. While
transparency usually implies insufficient radiative pressure to drive a wind,
the radiation field can accelerate these large grains via photon scattering
rather than absorption - a plausible mass-loss mechanism for lower-amplitude
pulsating stars.Comment: 13 pages, 1 table, 6 figure
Michelson Interferometry with the Keck I Telescope
We report the first use of Michelson interferometry on the Keck I telescope
for diffraction-limited imaging in the near infrared JHK and L bands. By using
an aperture mask located close to the f/25 secondary, the 10 m Keck primary
mirror was transformed into a separate-element, multiple aperture
interferometer. This has allowed diffraction-limited imaging of a large number
of bright astrophysical targets, including the geometrically complex dust
envelopes around a number of evolved stars. The successful restoration of these
images, with dynamic ranges in excess of 200:1, highlights the significant
capabilities of sparse aperture imaging as compared with more conventional
filled-pupil speckle imaging for the class of bright targets considered here.
In particular the enhancement of the signal-to-noise ratio of the Fourier data,
precipitated by the reduction in atmospheric noise, allows high fidelity
imaging of complex sources with small numbers of short-exposure images relative
to speckle. Multi-epoch measurements confirm the reliability of this imaging
technique and our whole dataset provides a powerful demonstration of the
capabilities of aperture masking methods when utilized with the current
generation of large-aperture telescopes. The relationship between these new
results and recent advances in interferometry and adaptive optics is briefly
discussed.Comment: Accepted into Publications of the Astronomical Society of the
Pacific. To appear in vol. 112. Paper contains 10 pages, 8 figure
An analysis of spectra in the Red Rectangle nebula
This paper presents an analysis of a series of spectra in the Red Rectangle
nebula. Only the reddest part of the spectra can safely be attributed to light
from the nebula, and indicates Rayleigh scattering by the gas, in conformity
with the large angles of scattering involved and the proximity of the star. In
the blue, light from HD44179, refracted or scattered in the atmosphere,
dominates the spectra. This paper questions the reliability of ground-based
observations of extended objects in the blue.Comment: 25 figure
Resolving Vega and the inclination controversy with CHARA/MIRC
Optical and infrared interferometers definitively established that the
photometric standard Vega (alpha Lyrae) is a rapidly rotating star viewed
nearly pole-on. Recent independent spectroscopic analyses could not reconcile
the inferred inclination angle with the observed line profiles, preferring a
larger inclination. In order to resolve this controversy, we observed Vega
using the six-beam Michigan Infrared Combiner on the Center for High Angular
Resolution Astronomy Array. With our greater angular resolution and dense
(u,v)-coverage, we find Vega is rotating less rapidly and with a smaller
gravity darkening coefficient than previous interferometric results. Our models
are compatible with low photospheric macroturbulence and also consistent with
the possible rotational period of ~0.71 days recently reported based on
magnetic field observations. Our updated evolutionary analysis explicitly
incorporates rapid rotation, finding Vega to have a mass of 2.15+0.10_-0.15
Msun and an age 700-75+150 Myrs, substantially older than previous estimates
with errors dominated by lingering metallicity uncertainties
(Z=0.006+0.003-0.002).Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Planet Formation Imager (PFI): Introduction and Technical Considerations
Complex non-linear and dynamic processes lie at the heart of the planet
formation process. Through numerical simulation and basic observational
constraints, the basics of planet formation are now coming into focus. High
resolution imaging at a range of wavelengths will give us a glimpse into the
past of our own solar system and enable a robust theoretical framework for
predicting planetary system architectures around a range of stars surrounded by
disks with a diversity of initial conditions. Only long-baseline interferometry
can provide the needed angular resolution and wavelength coverage to reach
these goals and from here we launch our planning efforts. The aim of the
"Planet Formation Imager" (PFI) project is to develop the roadmap for the
construction of a new near-/mid-infrared interferometric facility that will be
optimized to unmask all the major stages of planet formation, from initial dust
coagulation, gap formation, evolution of transition disks, mass accretion onto
planetary embryos, and eventual disk dispersal. PFI will be able to detect the
emission of the cooling, newly-formed planets themselves over the first 100
Myrs, opening up both spectral investigations and also providing a vibrant look
into the early dynamical histories of planetary architectures. Here we
introduce the Planet Formation Imager (PFI) Project
(www.planetformationimager.org) and give initial thoughts on possible facility
architectures and technical advances that will be needed to meet the
challenging top-level science requirements.Comment: SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation conference, June
2014, Paper ID 9146-35, 10 pages, 2 Figure
- …