805 research outputs found
A combined spectroscopic and photometric stellar activity study of Epsilon Eridani
We present simultaneous ground-based radial velocity (RV) measurements and
space-based photometric measurements of the young and active K dwarf Epsilon
Eridani. These measurements provide a data set for exploring methods of
identifying and ultimately distinguishing stellar photospheric velocities from
Keplerian motion. We compare three methods we have used in exploring this data
set: Dalmatian, an MCMC spot modeling code that fits photometric and RV
measurements simultaneously; the FF method, which uses photometric
measurements to predict the stellar activity signal in simultaneous RV
measurements; and H analysis. We show that our H measurements
are strongly correlated with photometry from the Microvariability and
Oscillations of STars (MOST) instrument, which led to a promising new method
based solely on the spectroscopic observations. This new method, which we refer
to as the HH method, uses H measurements as input into the FF
model. While the Dalmatian spot modeling analysis and the FF method with
MOST space-based photometry are currently more robust, the HH method only
makes use of one of the thousands of stellar lines in the visible spectrum. By
leveraging additional spectral activity indicators, we believe the HH method
may prove quite useful in disentangling stellar signals
Newly-Discovered Planets Orbiting HD~5319, HD~11506, HD~75784 and HD~10442 from the N2K Consortium
Initially designed to discover short-period planets, the N2K campaign has
since evolved to discover new worlds at large separations from their host
stars. Detecting such worlds will help determine the giant planet occurrence at
semi-major axes beyond the ice line, where gas giants are thought to mostly
form. Here we report four newly-discovered gas giant planets (with minimum
masses ranging from 0.4 to 2.1 MJup) orbiting stars monitored as part of the
N2K program. Two of these planets orbit stars already known to host planets: HD
5319 and HD 11506. The remaining discoveries reside in previously-unknown
planetary systems: HD 10442 and HD 75784. The refined orbital period of the
inner planet orbiting HD 5319 is 641 days. The newly-discovered outer planet
orbits in 886 days. The large masses combined with the proximity to a 4:3 mean
motion resonance make this system a challenge to explain with current formation
and migration theories. HD 11506 has one confirmed planet, and here we confirm
a second. The outer planet has an orbital period of 1627.5 days, and the
newly-discovered inner planet orbits in 223.6 days. A planet has also been
discovered orbiting HD 75784 with an orbital period of 341.7 days. There is
evidence for a longer period signal; however, several more years of
observations are needed to put tight constraints on the Keplerian parameters
for the outer planet. Lastly, an additional planet has been detected orbiting
HD 10442 with a period of 1043 days.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Planet Detectability in the Alpha Centauri System
Indexación: Scopus.We use more than a decade of radial-velocity measurements for α Cen A, B, and Proxima Centauri from the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher, CTIO High Resolution Spectrograph, and the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph to identify the M i sin and orbital periods of planets that could have been detected if they existed. At each point in a mass-period grid, we sample a simulated, Keplerian signal with the precision and cadence of existing data and assess the probability that the signal could have been produced by noise alone. Existing data places detection thresholds in the classically defined habitable zones at about M i sin of 53 M· for a Cen A, 8.4 M· for a Cen B, and 0.47 M· for Proxima Centauri. Additionally, we examine the impact of systematic errors, or "red noise" in the data. A comparison of white- and red-noise simulations highlights quasi-periodic variability in the radial velocities that may be caused by systematic errors, photospheric velocity signals, or planetary signals. For example, the red-noise simulations show a peak above white-noise simulations at the period of Proxima Centauri b. We also carry out a spectroscopic analysis of the chemical composition of the a Centauri stars. The stars have supersolar metallicity with ratios of C/O and Mg/Si that are similar to the Sun, suggesting that any small planets in the a Cen system may be compositionally similar to our terrestrial planets. Although the small projected separation of a Cen A and B currently hampers extreme-precision radial-velocity measurements, the angular separation is now increasing. By 2019, a Cen A and B will be ideal targets for renewed Doppler planet surveys.http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/aa9bea/met
Possible evidence for an inverted temperature-density relation in the intergalactic medium from the flux distribution of the Lyman-alpha forest
We compare the improved measurement of the Lya forest flux probability
distribution at 1.7<z<3.2 presented by Kim et al. (2007) to a large set of
hydrodynamical simulations of the Lya forest with different cosmological
parameters and thermal histories. The simulations are in good agreement with
the observational data if the temperature-density relation for the low density
intergalactic medium (IGM), T=T_0 Delta^{gamma-1}, is either close to
isothermal or inverted (gamma<1). Our results suggest that the voids in the IGM
may be significantly hotter and the thermal state of the low density IGM may be
substantially more complex than is usually assumed at these redshifts. We
discuss radiative transfer effects which alter the spectral shape of ionising
radiation during the epoch of HeII reionisation as a possible physical
mechanism for achieving an inverted temperature-density relation at z~3.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS following
minor revision. The accepted version includes an expanded discussion of the
flux power spectru
A Direct Measurement of the IGM Opacity to HI Ionizing Photons
We present a new method to directly measure the opacity from HI Lyman limit
(LL) absorption k_LL along quasar sightlines by the intergalactic medium (IGM).
The approach analyzes the average (``stacked'') spectrum of an ensemble of
quasars at a common redshift to infer the mean free path (MFP) to ionizing
radiation. We apply this technique to 1800 quasars at z=3.50-4.34 drawn from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), giving the most precise measurements on
k_LL at any redshift. From z=3.6 to 4.3, the opacity increases steadily as
expected and is well parameterized by MFP = (48.4 +/- 2.1) - (38.0 +/-
5.3)*(z-3.6) h^-1 Mpc (proper distance). The relatively high MFP values
indicate that the incidence of systems which dominate k_LL evolves less
strongly at z>3 than that of the Lya forest. We infer a mean free path three
times higher than some previous estimates, a result which has important
implications for the photo-ionization rate derived from the emissivity of star
forming galaxies and quasars. Finally, our analysis reveals a previously
unreported, systematic bias in the SDSS quasar sample related to the survey's
color targeting criteria. This bias potentially affects all z~3 IGM studies
using the SDSS database.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; Accepted to ApJ
Planet Hunters VII. Discovery of a New Low-Mass, Low-Density Planet (PH3 c) Orbiting Kepler-289 with Mass Measurements of Two Additional Planets (PH3 b and d)
We report the discovery of one newly confirmed planet ( days,
) and mass determinations of two previously
validated Kepler planets, Kepler-289 b ( days,
) and Kepler-289-c ( days,
), through their transit timing variations
(TTVs). We also exclude the possibility that these three planets reside in a
Laplace resonance. The outer planet has very deep (), high
signal-to-noise transits, which puts extremely tight constraints on its host
star's stellar properties via Kepler's Third Law. The star PH3 is a young
( Gyr as determined by isochrones and gyrochronology), Sun-like star
with , , and
K. The middle planet's large TTV amplitude (
hours) resulted either in non-detections or inaccurate detections in previous
searches. A strong chopping signal, a shorter period sinusoid in the TTVs,
allows us to break the mass-eccentricity degeneracy and uniquely determine the
masses of the inner, middle, and outer planets to be ,
, and , which we designate PH3 b, c, and
d, respectively. Furthermore, the middle planet, PH3 c, has a relatively low
density, g/cm for a planet of its mass, requiring a
substantial H/He atmosphere of by mass, and joins a
growing population of low-mass, low-density planets.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables, accepted into Ap
Book Reviews
Reviews of the following books: Mount Hope Cemetery of Bangor, Maine: The Complete History by Trudy Irene Scee; The Reverend Jacob Bailey, Maine Loyalist: For God, King, Country and for Self by James S. Leamon; The Barns of Maine: Our History, Our Stories by Don Perkins; Gateway to Vacationland: The Making of Portland, Maine by John F. Bauman; Maine: The Wilder Half of New England by William David Berry; The Cross of War: Christian Nationalism and U.S. Expansion in the Spanish-American War by Matthew McCullough; Omaha Beach: The Life and Military Service of a Penobscot Indian Elder by Charles Norman Shay
An Eccentric Binary Millisecond Pulsar in the Galactic Plane
Binary pulsar systems are superb probes of stellar and binary evolution and
the physics of extreme environments. In a survey with the Arecibo telescope, we
have found PSR J1903+0327, a radio pulsar with a rotational period of 2.15 ms
in a highly eccentric (e = 0.44) 95-day orbit around a solar mass companion.
Infrared observations identify a possible main-sequence companion star.
Conventional binary stellar evolution models predict neither large orbital
eccentricities nor main-sequence companions around millisecond pulsars.
Alternative formation scenarios involve recycling a neutron star in a globular
cluster then ejecting it into the Galactic disk or membership in a hierarchical
triple system. A relativistic analysis of timing observations of the pulsar
finds its mass to be 1.74+/-0.04 Msun, an unusually high value.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures inc Supplementary On-Line Material. Accepted for
publication in Science, published on Science Express: 10.1126/science.115758
Planet Hunters. V. A Confirmed Jupiter-Size Planet in the Habitable Zone and 42 Planet Candidates from the Kepler Archive Data
We report the latest Planet Hunter results, including PH2 b, a Jupiter-size
(R_PL = 10.12 \pm 0.56 R_E) planet orbiting in the habitable zone of a
solar-type star. PH2 b was elevated from candidate status when a series of
false positive tests yielded a 99.9% confidence level that transit events
detected around the star KIC 12735740 had a planetary origin. Planet Hunter
volunteers have also discovered 42 new planet candidates in the Kepler public
archive data, of which 33 have at least three transits recorded. Most of these
transit candidates have orbital periods longer than 100 days and 20 are
potentially located in the habitable zones of their host stars. Nine candidates
were detected with only two transit events and the prospective periods are
longer than 400 days. The photometric models suggest that these objects have
radii that range between Neptune to Jupiter. These detections nearly double the
number of gas giant planet candidates orbiting at habitable zone distances. We
conducted spectroscopic observations for nine of the brighter targets to
improve the stellar parameters and we obtained adaptive optics imaging for four
of the stars to search for blended background or foreground stars that could
confuse our photometric modeling. We present an iterative analysis method to
derive the stellar and planet properties and uncertainties by combining the
available spectroscopic parameters, stellar evolution models, and transiting
light curve parameters, weighted by the measurement errors. Planet Hunters is a
citizen science project that crowd-sources the assessment of NASA Kepler light
curves. The discovery of these 43 planet candidates demonstrates the success of
citizen scientists at identifying planet candidates, even in longer period
orbits with only two or three transit events.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures, 6 tables, accepted and published on ApJ ApJ,
776, 1
Arecibo Pulsar Survey Using ALFA. I. Survey Strategy and First Discoveries
We report results from the initial stage of a long-term pulsar survey of the
Galactic plane using the Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA), a seven-beam
receiver operating at 1.4 GHz with 0.3 GHz bandwidth. The search targets
Galactic latitudes |b| < 5 deg in the longitude ranges 32 deg < l < 77 deg and
168 deg < l < 77 deg. Data discussed here were collected over a 100 MHz
passband centered on 1.42 GHz using a spectrometer that recorded 256 channels
every 64 microsec. In a preliminary, standard period-DM analysis, we have
detected 29 previously known pulsars and discovered 11 new ones. One of these,
with a period of 69 ms and a low characteristic age of 82 kyr, is a plausible
candidate for association with the unidentified EGRET source 3EG J1928+1733.
Another is a non-recycled pulsar in a relativistic binary with orbital period
of 3.98 hr. We also search the data for isolated dispersed pulses, a technique
that yielded discovery of an extremely sporadic radio emitter with a spin
period of 1.2 s. Simulations we have carried out indicate that about 1000 new
pulsars will be found in the ALFA survey. In addition to providing a large
sample for use in population analyses and for probing the magnetoionic
interstellar medium, the survey maximizes the chances of finding rapidly
spinning millisecond pulsars and pulsars in compact binary systems. Our search
algorithms will exploit the multiple data streams from ALFA to discriminate
between radio frequency interference and celestial signals, including pulsars
and possibly new classes of transient radio sources.Comment: 10 pp, 9 figures, accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
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