34 research outputs found
ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLES ASSOCIATED WITH INVASIVE GLOSSY BUCKTHORN (FRANGULA ALNUS MILL.) AND INDIRECT CONTROL STRATEGIES FOR FOREST MANAGERS
Glossy buckthorn (Frangula alnus Mill.) is one of the most prominent non-native invasive plant species affecting New England forests. It quickly invades a forest and can create a dense understory effectively altering the species composition and dynamics of that forest. To gain a better understanding of the environmental variables associated with glossy buckthorn density we sampled forests across New Hampshire with varying degrees of buckthorn invasion. The effect on tree regeneration was analyzed with measurements of height and abundance of glossy buckthorn and native regeneration. Glossy buckthorn was found to be at its highest densities in disturbed softwood forests that were historically old fields, specifically eastern white pine (Pinus strobus L.), with a thin organic layer and low herbaceous cover on drained loam and clay soils. The data show there is direct competition between glossy buckthorn and forest tree regeneration, although no relationship with regeneration shade tolerance was found. This information was used to create a prescription risk tree to aid forest managers in assessing the risk of buckthorn invasion and inhibition of tree regeneration associated with harvesting and suggests how to adapt their silvicultural prescriptions
TESS Discovery of an ultra-short-period planet around the nearby M dwarf LHS 3844
Data from the newly-commissioned \textit{Transiting Exoplanet Survey
Satellite} (TESS) has revealed a "hot Earth" around LHS 3844, an M dwarf
located 15 pc away. The planet has a radius of and
orbits the star every 11 hours. Although the existence of an atmosphere around
such a strongly irradiated planet is questionable, the star is bright enough
(, ) for this possibility to be investigated with transit and
occultation spectroscopy. The star's brightness and the planet's short period
will also facilitate the measurement of the planet's mass through Doppler
spectroscopy.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to ApJ Letters. This letter makes use
of the TESS Alert data, which is currently in a beta test phase, using data
from the pipelines at the TESS Science Office and at the TESS Science
Processing Operations Cente
TESS Discovery of a Transiting Super-Earth in the Mensae System
We report the detection of a transiting planet around Mensae (HD
39091), using data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The
solar-type host star is unusually bright (V=5.7) and was already known to host
a Jovian planet on a highly eccentric, 5.7-year orbit. The newly discovered
planet has a size of and an orbital period of 6.27
days. Radial-velocity data from the HARPS and AAT/UCLES archives also displays
a 6.27-day periodicity, confirming the existence of the planet and leading to a
mass determination of . The star's proximity and
brightness will facilitate further investigations, such as atmospheric
spectroscopy, asteroseismology, the Rossiter--McLaughlin effect, astrometry,
and direct imaging.Comment: Accepted for publication ApJ Letters. This letter makes use of the
TESS Alert data, which is currently in a beta test phase. The discovery light
curve is included in a table inside the arxiv submissio
TESS full orbital phase curve of the WASP-18b system
We present a visible-light full orbital phase curve of the transiting planet
WASP-18b measured by the TESS Mission. The phase curve includes the transit,
secondary eclipse, and sinusoidal modulations across the orbital phase shaped
by the planet's atmospheric characteristics and the star-planet gravitational
interaction. We measure the beaming (Doppler boosting) and tidal ellipsoidal
distortion phase modulations and show that the amplitudes of both agree with
theoretical expectations. We find that the light from the planet's day-side
hemisphere occulted during secondary eclipse, with a relative brightness of
ppm, is dominated by thermal emission, leading to an upper
limit on the geometric albedo in the TESS band of 0.048 (2). We also
detect the phase modulation due to the planet's atmosphere longitudinal
brightness distribution. We find that its maximum is well-aligned with the
sub-stellar point, to within 2.9 deg (2). We do not detect light from
the planet's night-side hemisphere, with an upper limit of 43 ppm (2),
which is 13 % of the day-side brightness. The low albedo, lack of atmospheric
phase shift, and inefficient heat distribution from the day to night
hemispheres that we deduce from our analysis are consistent with theoretical
expectations and similar findings for other strongly irradiated gas giant
planets. This work demonstrates the potential of TESS data for studying full
orbital phase curves of transiting systems. Finally, we complement our study by
looking for transit timing variations (TTVs) in the TESS data and combined with
previously published transit times, although we do not find a statistically
significant TTV signal.Comment: V2: Added another TESS Sector of data to the analysis, added TTV
analysis, accepted to A
TESS Reveals HD 118203 b to be a Transiting Planet
The exoplanet HD 118203 b, orbiting a bright (V = 8.05) host star, was discovered using the radial velocity method by da Silva et al., but was not previously known to transit. Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) photometry has revealed that this planet transits its host star. Nine planetary transits were observed by TESS, allowing us to measure the radius of the planet to be 1.136^(+0.029)_(-0.028) R_J, and to calculate the planet mass to be 2.166^(+0.074)_(-0.079) M_J. The host star is slightly evolved with an effective temperature of T_(eff) = 5683^(+84)_(-85) K and a surface gravity of log g = 3.889^(+0.017)_(-0.018). With an orbital period of 6.134985^(+0.000029_(-0.000030) days and an eccentricity of 0.314 ± 0.017, the planet occupies a transitional regime between circularized hot Jupiters and more dynamically active planets at longer orbital periods. The host star is among the 10 brightest known to have transiting giant planets, providing opportunities for both planetary atmospheric and asteroseismic studies
HD 219134 Revisited: Planet d Transit Upper Limit and Planet f Transit Nondetection with ASTERIA and TESS
HD 219134 is a K3V dwarf star with six reported radial-velocity discovered planets. The two innermost planets b and c show transits, raising the possibility of this system to be the nearest (6.53 pc), brightest (V = 5.57) example of a star with a compact multiple transiting planet system. Ground-based searches for transits of planets beyond b and c are not feasible because of the infrequent transits, long transit duration (~5 hr), shallow transit depths (<1%), and large transit time uncertainty (~half a day). We use the space-based telescopes the Arcsecond Space Telescope Enabling Research in Astrophysics (ASTERIA) and the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) to search for transits of planets f (P = 22.717 days and M sin i = 7.3 ± 0.04M_⊕) and d (P = 46.859 days and M sin i = 16.7 ± 0.64M_⊕). ASTERIA was a technology demonstration CubeSat with an opportunity for science in an extended program. ASTERIA observations of HD 219134 were designed to cover the 3σ transit windows for planets f and d via repeated visits over many months. While TESS has much higher sensitivity and more continuous time coverage than ASTERIA, only the HD 219134 f transit window fell within the TESS survey's observations. Our TESS photometric results definitively rule out planetary transits for HD 219134 f. We do not detect the Neptune-mass HD 219134 d transits and our ASTERIA data are sensitive to planets as small as 3.6 R_⊕. We provide TESS updated transit times and periods for HD 219134 b and c, which are designated TOI 1469.01 and 1469.02 respectively
Hot, rocky and warm, puffy super-Earths orbiting TOI-402 (HD 15337)
Context: The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is revolutionising the search for planets orbiting bright and nearby stars. In sectors 3 and 4, TESS observed TOI-402 (TIC-120896927), a bright V = 9.1 K1 dwarf also known as HD 15337, and found two transiting signals with periods of 4.76 and 17.18 days and radii of 1.90 and 2.21 R⊕, respectively. This star was observed prior to the TESS detection as part of the radial-velocity (RV) search for planets using the HARPS spectrometer, and 85 precise RV measurements were obtained before the launch of TESS over a period of 14 yr.
Aims: In this paper, we analyse the HARPS RV measurements in hand to confirm the planetary nature of these two signals.
Methods: HD 15337 happens to present a stellar activity level similar to the Sun, with a magnetic cycle of similar amplitude and RV measurements that are affected by stellar activity. By modelling this stellar activity in the HARPS radial velocities using a linear dependence with the calcium activity index log(RHK′), we are able, with a periodogram approach, to confirm the periods and the planetary nature of TOI-402.01 and TOI-402.02. We then derive robust estimates from the HARPS RVs for the orbital parameters of these two planets by modelling stellar activity with a Gaussian process and using the marginalised posterior probability density functions obtained from our analysis of TESS photometry for the orbital period and time of transit.
Results: By modelling TESS photometry and the stellar host characteristics, we find that TOI-402.01 and TOI-402.02 have periods of 4.75642 ± 0.00021 and 17.1784 ± 0.0016 days and radii of 1.70 ± 0.06 and 2.52 ± 0.11 R⊕ (precision 3.6 and 4.2%), respectively. By analysing the HARPS RV measurements, we find that those planets are both super-Earths with masses of 7.20 ± 0.81 and 8.79 ± 1.68 M⊕ (precision 11.3 and 19.1%), and small eccentricities compatible with zero at 2σ.
Conclusions: Although having rather similar masses, the radii of these two planets are very different, putting them on different sides of the radius gap. By studying the temporal evolution under X-ray and UV (XUV) driven atmospheric escape of the TOI-402 planetary system, we confirm, under the given assumptions, that photo-evaporation is a plausible explanation for this radius difference. Those two planets, being in the same system and therefore being in the same irradiation environment are therefore extremely useful for comparative exoplanetology across the evaporation valley and thus bring constraints on the mechanisms responsible for the radius gap
An Eccentric Massive Jupiter Orbiting a Subgiant on a 9.5-day Period Discovered in the <i>Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite</i> Full Frame Images
We report the discovery of TOI-172 b from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, a massive hot Jupiter transiting a slightly evolved G star with a 9.48-day orbital period. This is the first planet to be confirmed from analysis of only the TESS full frame images, because the host star was not chosen as a two-minute cadence target. From a global analysis of the TESS photometry and follow-up observations carried out by the TESS Follow-up Observing Program Working Group, TOI-172 (TIC 29857954) is a slightly evolved star with an effective temperature of T eff = 5645 ± 50 K, a mass of M ⋆ = {1.128}-0.061+0.065 M ⊙, radius of R ⋆ = {1.777}-0.044+0.047 R ⊙, a surface gravity of log g ⋆ = {3.993}-0.028+0.027, and an age of {7.4}-1.5+1.6 {Gyr}. Its planetary companion (TOI-172 b) has a radius of R P = {0.965}-0.029+0.032 R J, a mass of M P = {5.42}-0.20+0.22 M J, and is on an eccentric orbit (e={0.3806}-0.0090+0.0093). TOI-172 b is one of the few known massive giant planets on a highly eccentric short-period orbit. Future study of the atmosphere of this planet and its system architecture offer opportunities to understand the formation and evolution of similar systems
A Giant Planet Candidate Transiting a White Dwarf
Astronomers have discovered thousands of planets outside the solar system,
most of which orbit stars that will eventually evolve into red giants and then
into white dwarfs. During the red giant phase, any close-orbiting planets will
be engulfed by the star, but more distant planets can survive this phase and
remain in orbit around the white dwarf. Some white dwarfs show evidence for
rocky material floating in their atmospheres, in warm debris disks, or orbiting
very closely, which has been interpreted as the debris of rocky planets that
were scattered inward and tidally disrupted. Recently, the discovery of a
gaseous debris disk with a composition similar to ice giant planets
demonstrated that massive planets might also find their way into tight orbits
around white dwarfs, but it is unclear whether the planets can survive the
journey. So far, the detection of intact planets in close orbits around white
dwarfs has remained elusive. Here, we report the discovery of a giant planet
candidate transiting the white dwarf WD 1856+534 (TIC 267574918) every 1.4
days. The planet candidate is roughly the same size as Jupiter and is no more
than 14 times as massive (with 95% confidence). Other cases of white dwarfs
with close brown dwarf or stellar companions are explained as the consequence
of common-envelope evolution, wherein the original orbit is enveloped during
the red-giant phase and shrinks due to friction. In this case, though, the low
mass and relatively long orbital period of the planet candidate make
common-envelope evolution less likely. Instead, the WD 1856+534 system seems to
demonstrate that giant planets can be scattered into tight orbits without being
tidally disrupted, and motivates searches for smaller transiting planets around
white dwarfs.Comment: 50 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables. Published in Nature on Sept. 17,
2020. The final authenticated version is available online at:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2713-