293 research outputs found
Game Theoretical Treatment of Material Accountability Problems: Part II
In a previous paper, the optimal strategy for an inspection authority which has to safeguard material on the basis of material accountability principles has been determined with game theoretical methods: Sets of reasonable inspection and diversion strategies have been defined, and a saddlepoint of the overall probability of detection for n inventory periods during the reference time under consideration has been determined.
In this paper the problem of the appropriate choice of the number of inventory periods per reference time has been analyzed: it has been shown that the overall probability of detection in the case of one inventory period per reference time is always larger than that in the case of n inventory periods for n>1, and further it has been shown in which way this result is reflected in the expected detection time
Scattered light mapping of protoplanetary disks
High-contrast scattered light observations have revealed the surface
morphology of several dozens of protoplanetary disks at optical and
near-infrared wavelengths. Inclined disks offer the opportunity to measure part
of the phase function of the dust grains that reside in the disk surface which
is essential for our understanding of protoplanetary dust properties and the
early stages of planet formation. We aim to construct a method which takes into
account how the flaring shape of the scattering surface of an (optically thick)
protoplanetary disk projects onto the image plane of the observer. This allows
us to map physical quantities (scattering radius and scattering angle) onto
scattered light images and retrieve stellar irradiation corrected (r^2-scaled)
images and dust phase functions. We apply the method on archival polarized
intensity images of the protoplanetary disk around HD 100546 that were obtained
with VLT/SPHERE in R'-band and VLT/NACO in H- and Ks-band. The brightest side
of the r^2-scaled R'-band polarized intensity image of HD 100546 changes from
the far to the near side of the disk when a flaring instead of a geometrically
flat disk surface is used for the r^2-scaling. The decrease in polarized
surface brightness in the scattering angle range of ~40-70 deg is likely a
result of the dust phase function and degree of polarization which peak in
different scattering angle regimes. The derived phase functions show part of a
forward scattering peak which indicates that large, aggregate dust grains
dominate the scattering opacity in the disk surface. Projection effects of a
protoplanetary disk surface need to be taken into account to correctly
interpret scattered light images. Applying the correct scaling for the
correction of stellar irradiation is crucial for the interpretation of the
images and the derivation of the dust properties in the disk surface layer.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 6 pages, 3 figure
HD 169142 in the eyes of ZIMPOL/SPHERE
We present new data of the protoplanetary disc surrounding the Herbig Ae/Be
star HD 169142 obtained in the very broad-band (VBB) with the Zurich imaging
polarimeter (ZIMPOL), a sub-system of the Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast
Exoplanet REsearch instrument (SPHERE) at the Very Large Telescope (VLT). Our
Polarimetric Differential Imaging (PDI) observations probe the disc as close as
0.03" (3.5au) to the star and are able to trace the disc out to ~1.08"
(~126au). We find an inner hole, a bright ring bearing substructures around
0.18" (21au), and an elliptically shaped gap stretching from 0.25" to 0.47"
(29-55au). Outside of 0.47", the surface brightness drops off, discontinued
only by a narrow annular brightness minimum at ~0.63"-0.74" (74-87au). These
observations confirm features found in less-well resolved data as well as
reveal yet undetected indications for planet-disc interactions, such as
small-scale structures, star-disk offsets, and potentially moving shadows.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Detection of scattered light from the hot dust in HD 172555
Debris disks or belts are important signposts for the presence of colliding
planetesimals and, therefore, for ongoing planet formation and evolution
processes in young planetary systems. Imaging of debris material at small
separations from the star is very challenging but provides valuable insights
into the spatial distribution of so-called hot dust produced by solid bodies
located in or near the habitable zone. We report the first detection of
scattered light from the hot dust around the nearby (d = 28.33 pc) A star HD
172555. We want to constrain the geometric structure of the detected debris
disk using polarimetric differential Imaging (PDI) with a spatial resolution of
25 mas and an inner working angle of about 0.1. We measured the polarized
light of HD 172555, with SPHERE-ZIMPOL, in the very broad band (VBB;
nm) filter for the projected separations between 0.08 (2.3
au) and 0.77 (22 au). We constrained the disk parameters by fitting models
for scattering of an optically thin dust disk taking the limited spatial
resolution and coronagraphic attenuation of our data into account. The
geometric structure of the disk in polarized light shows roughly the same
orientation and outer extent as obtained from thermal emission at 18 m.
Our image indicates the presence of a strongly inclined (),
roughly axisymmetric dust belt with an outer radius in the range between
0.3 (8.5 au) and 0.4 (11.3 au). We derive a lower limit for the
polarized flux contrast ratio for the disk of in the VBB filter. This ratio is small, only
9 %, when compared to the fractional infrared flux excess (). The model simulations show that more polarized light could be
produced by the dust located inside 2 au, which cannot be detected with the
instrument configuration used.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
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