3,202 research outputs found
The first high-amplitude delta Scuti star in an eclipsing binary system
We report the discovery of the first high-amplitude delta Scuti star in an
eclipsing binary, which we have designated UNSW-V-500. The system is an
Algol-type semi-detached eclipsing binary of maximum brightness V = 12.52 mag.
A best-fitting solution to the binary light curve and two radial velocity
curves is derived using the Wilson-Devinney code. We identify a late A spectral
type primary component of mass 1.49+/-0.02 M_sun and a late K spectral type
secondary of mass 0.33+/-0.02 M_sun, with an inclination of 86.5+/-1.0 degrees,
and a period of 5.3504751+/-0.0000006 d. A Fourier analysis of the residuals
from this solution is performed using PERIOD04 to investigate the delta Scuti
pulsations. We detect a single pulsation frequency of f_1 = 13.621+/-0.015 c/d,
and it appears this is the first overtone radial mode frequency. This system
provides the first opportunity to measure the dynamical mass for a star of this
variable type; previously, masses have been derived from stellar evolution and
pulsation models.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, for submission to MNRAS, v2: paper size
change, small typographical changes to abstrac
The UNSW Extrasolar Planet Search: Methods and First Results from a Field Centred on NGC 6633
We report on the current status of the University of New South Wales
Extrasolar Planet Search project, giving details of the methods we use to
obtain millimagnitude precision photometry using the 0.5m Automated Patrol
Telescope. We use a novel observing technique to optimally broaden the PSF and
thus largely eliminate photometric noise due to intra-pixel sensitivity
variations on the CCD. We have observed 8 crowded Galactic fields using this
technique during 2003 and 2004. Our analysis of the first of these fields
(centred on the open cluster NGC 6633) has yielded 49 variable stars and 4
shallow transit candidates. Follow-up observations of these candidates have
identified them as eclipsing binary systems. We use a detailed simulation of
our observations to estimate our sensitivity to short-period planets, and to
select a new observing strategy to maximise the number of planets detected.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, version published in MNRAS Updated figures,
references, and additional discussion in section
A New Spectroscopic and Photometric Analysis of the Transiting Planet Systems TrES-3 and TrES-4
We report new spectroscopic and photometric observations of the parent stars
of the recently discovered transiting planets TrES-3 and TrES-4. A detailed
abundance analysis based on high-resolution spectra yields [Fe/H] , K, and for TrES-3,
and [Fe/H] , K, and for TrES-4. The accuracy of the effective temperatures is supported
by a number of independent consistency checks. The spectroscopic orbital
solution for TrES-3 is improved with our new radial-velocity measurements of
that system, as are the light-curve parameters for both systems based on newly
acquired photometry for TrES-3 and a reanalysis of existing photometry for
TrES-4. We have redetermined the stellar parameters taking advantage of the
strong constraint provided by the light curves in the form of the normalized
separation (related to the stellar density) in conjunction with our
new temperatures and metallicities. The masses and radii we derive are
M_\star=0.928_{-0.048}^{+0.028} M_{\sun},R_\star = 0.829_{-0.022}^{+0.015}
R_{\sun}, and M_\star = 1.404_{-0.134}^{+0.066} M_{\sun},
R_\star=1.846_{-0.087}^{+0.096} R_{\sun} for TrES-3 and TrES-4, respectively.
With these revised stellar parameters we obtain improved values for the
planetary masses and radii. We find , for TrES-3, and
, for TrES-4. We confirm TrES-4 as the planet with the largest
radius among the currently known transiting hot Jupiters.Comment: 42 pages, 10 tables, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
A Search for Propylene Oxide and Glycine in Sagittarius B2 (LMH) and Orion
We have used the Mopra Telescope to search for glycine and the simple chiral
molecule propylene oxide in the Sgr B2 (LMH) and Orion KL, in the 3-mm band. We
have not detected either species, but have been able to put sensitive upper
limits on the abundances of both molecules. The 3-sigma upper limits derived
for glycine conformer I are 3.7 x 10^{14} cm^{-2} in both Orion-KL and Sgr B2
(LMH), comparable to the reported detections of conformer I by Kuan et al.
However, as our values are 3-sigma upper limits rather than detections we
conclude that this weighs against confirming the detection of Kuan et al. We
find upper limits for the glycine II column density of 7.7 x 10^{12} cm^{-2} in
both Orion-KL and Sgr B2 (LMH), in agreement with the results of Combes et al.
The results presented here show that glycine conformer II is not present in the
extended gas at the levels detected by Kuan et al. for conformer I. Our ATCA
results (Jones et al.) have ruled out the detection of glycine (both conformers
I and II) in the compact hot core of the LMH at the levels reported, so we
conclude that it is unlikely that Kuan et al. have detected glycine in either
Sgr B2 or Orion-KL. We find upper limits for propylene oxide abundance of 3.0 x
10^{14} cm^{-2} in Orion-KL and 6.7 x 10^{14} cm^{-2} in Sgr B2 (LMH). We have
detected fourteen features in Sgr B2 and four features in Orion-KL which have
not previously been reported in the ISM, but have not be able to plausibly
assign these transitions to any carrier.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Accepted by MNRAS 12th January 200
A new detached K7 dwarf eclipsing binary system
We present an analysis of a new, detached, double-lined eclipsing binary
system with K7 Ve components, discovered as part of the University of New South
Wales Extrasolar Planet Search. The object is significant in that only 6 other
binary systems are known with comparable or lower mass. Such systems offer
important tests of mass-radius theoretical models. Follow-up photometry and
spectroscopy were obtained with the 40-inch and 2.3m telescopes at SSO
respectively. An estimate of the radial velocity amplitude from spectral
absorption features, combined with the orbital inclination (83.5 deg) estimated
from lightcurve fitting, yielded a total mass of M=(1.041 +/- 0.06)M_sun and
component masses of M_A=(0.529 +/- 0.035)M_sun and M_B=(0.512 +/- 0.035)M_sun.
The radial velocity amplitude estimated from absorption features (167 +/-
3)kmps was found to be less than the estimate from the H_alpha emission lines
(175 +/- 1.5)kmps. The lightcurve fit produced radii of R_A=(0.641 +/-
0.05)R_sun and R_B=(0.608 +/- 0.06)R_sun, and a temperature ratio of
T_B/T_A=0.980 +/- 0.015. The apparent magnitude of the binary was estimated to
be V=13.9 +/- 0.2. Combined with the spectral type, this gave the distance to
the binary as 169 +/- 14 pc. The timing of the secondary eclipse gave a lower
limit on the eccentricity of the binary system of 0.0025 +/- 0.0005. This is
the most statistically significant non-zero eccentricity found for such a
system, possibly suggesting the presence of a third companion.Comment: 6 pages, published in MNRAS (08/2006
Observational detection of eclipses of J5 Amalthea by the Galilean satellites
We carried out observations of the small jovian satellite Amalthea (J5) as it
was being eclipsed by the Galilean satellites near the 2009 equinox of Jupiter
in order to apply the technique of mutual event photometry to the astrometric
determination of this satellite's position. The observations were carried out
during the period 06/2009-09/2009 from the island of Maui, Hawaii and Siding
Spring, Australia with the 2m Faulkes Telescopes North and South respectively.
We observed in the near-infrared part of the spectrum using a PanStarrs-Z
filter with Jupiter near the edge of the field in order to mitigate against the
glare from the planet. Frames were acquired at rates >1/min during eclipse
times predicted using recent JPL ephemerides for the satellites. Following
subtraction of the sky background from these frames, differential aperture
photometry was carried out on Amalthea and a nearby field star. We have
obtained three lightcurves which show a clear drop in the flux from Amalthea,
indicating that an eclipse took place as predicted. These were model-fitted to
yield best estimates of the time of maximum flux drop and the impact parameter.
These are consistent with Amalthea's ephemeris but indicate that Amalthea is
slightly ahead of, and closer to Jupiter than, its predicted position by
approximately half the ephemeris uncertainty in these directions. We argue that
a ground-based campaign of higher-cadence photometry accurate at the 5% level
or better during the next season of eclipses in 2014-15 should yield positions
to within 0".5 and affect a corresponding improvement in Amalthea's ephemeris.Comment: Published in A&A in 2010; 6 pages, 2 figures, 3 table
An ingress and a complete transit of HD 80606 b
We have used four telescopes at different longitudes to obtain
near-continuous lightcurve coverage of the star HD 80606 as it was transited by
its \sim 4-MJup planet. The observations were performed during the predicted
transit windows around the 25th of October 2008 and the 14th of February 2009.
Our data set is unique in that it simultaneously constrains the duration of the
transit and the planet's period. Our Markov-Chain Monte Carlo analysis of the
light curves, combined with constraints from radial-velocity data, yields
system parameters consistent with previously reported values. We find a
planet-to-star radius ratio marginally smaller than previously reported,
corresponding to a planet radius of Rp = 0.921 \pm 0.036RJup .Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, MNRAS accepte
An observation of a mutual event between two satellites of Uranus
We present observations of the occultation of Umbriel by Oberon on 4 May,
2007. We believe this is the first observed mutual event between satellites of
Uranus. Fitting a simple geometric model to the lightcurve, we measure the
mid-event time with a precision of 4 seconds. We assume previously measured
values for the albedos of the two satellites (Karkoschka 2001), and measure the
impact parameter to be 500 +/- 80 km. These measurements are more precise than
estimates based on current ephemerides for these satellites. Therefore
observations of additional mutual events during the 2007-2008 Uranian equinox
will provide improved estimates of their orbital and physical parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
TrES-3: A Nearby, Massive, Transiting Hot Jupiter in a 31-Hour Orbit
We describe the discovery of a massive transiting hot Jupiter with a very
short orbital period (1.30619 d), which we name TrES-3. From spectroscopy of
the host star GSC 03089-00929, we measure T_eff = 5720 +- 150 K, logg=4.6 +-
0.3, and vsini < 2 km/s, and derive a stellar mass of 0.90 +- 0.15 M_sun. We
estimate a planetary mass of 1.92 +- 0.23 M_Jup, based on the sinusoidal
variation of our high-precision radial velocity measurements. This variation
has a period and phase consistent with our transit photometry. Our spectra show
no evidence of line bisector variations that would indicate a blended eclipsing
binary star. From detailed modeling of our B and z photometry of the 2.5%-deep
transits, we determine a stellar radius 0.802 +- 0.046 R_sun and a planetary
radius 1.295 +- 0.081 R_Jup. TrES-3 has one of the shortest orbital periods of
the known transiting exoplanets, facilitating studies of orbital decay and mass
loss due to evaporation, and making it an excellent target for future studies
of infrared emission and reflected starlight.Comment: v1. 14 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables. Submitted to ApJL 27 April 2007.
Accepted for publication in ApJL 14 May 200
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