3,619 research outputs found
Simulation of a method to directly image exoplanets around multiple stars systems
Direct imaging of extra-solar planets has now become a reality, especially
with the deployment and commissioning of the first generation of specialized
ground-based instruments such as the GPI, SPHERE, P1640 and SCExAO. These
systems will allow detection of planets 1e7 times fainter than their host star.
For space-based missions, such as EXCEDE, EXO-C, EXO-S, WFIRST-AFTA,
different teams have shown in laboratories contrasts reaching 1e-10 within a
few diffraction limits from the star using a combination of a coronagraph to
suppress light coming from the host star and a wavefront control system. These
demonstrations use a deformable mirror (DM) to remove residual starlight
(speckles) created by the imperfections of telescope. However, all these
current and future systems focus on detecting faint planets around a single
host star or unresolved binaries/multiples, while several targets or planet
candidates are located around nearby binary stars such as our neighbor star
Alpha Centauri.
Until now, it has been thought that removing the light of a companion star is
impossible with the current technology, excluding binary star systems from
target lists of direct imaging missions. Direct imaging around binaries or
multiples systems at a level of contrast allowing Earth-like planets detection
is challenging because the region of interest, where a dark zone is essential,
is contaminated by the light coming from the host star's companion. We propose
a method to simultaneously correct aberration sand diffraction of light coming
from the target star. This method works even if the companion star is outside
the control region of the DM (beyond its half-Nyquist frequency), by taking
advantage of aliasing effects.Comment: 8 pages, 13 figures, SPIE Astronomical Telescope and Instrumentation
conferenc
TPC tracking and particle identification in high-density environment
Track finding and fitting algorithm in the ALICE Time projection chamber
(TPC) based on Kalman-filtering is presented. Implementation of particle
identification (PID) using d/d measurement is discussed. Filtering and
PID algorithm is able to cope with non-Gaussian noise as well as with ambiguous
measurements in a high-density environment. The occupancy can reach up to 40%
and due to the overlaps, often the points along the track are lost and others
are significantly displaced. In the present algorithm, first, clusters are
found and the space points are reconstructed. The shape of a cluster provides
information about overlap factor. Fast spline unfolding algorithm is applied
for points with distorted shapes. Then, the expected space point error is
estimated using information about the cluster shape and track parameters.
Furthermore, available information about local track overlap is used. Tests are
performed on simulation data sets to validate the analysis and to gain
practical experience with the algorithm.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
The EXoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and Disk Explorer (EXCEDE)
We present an overview of the EXoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and
Disk Explorer (EXCEDE), selected by NASA for technology development and
maturation. EXCEDE will study the formation, evolution and architectures of
exoplanetary systems, and characterize circumstellar environments into stellar
habitable zones. EXCEDE provides contrast-limited scattered-light detection
sensitivities ~ 1000x greater than HST or JWST coronagraphs at a much smaller
effective inner working angle (IWA), thus enabling the exploration and
characterization of exoplanetary circumstellar disks in currently inaccessible
domains. EXCEDE will utilize a laboratory demonstrated high-performance Phase
Induced Amplitude Apodized Coronagraph (PIAA-C) integrated with a 70 cm
diameter unobscured aperture visible light telescope. The EXCEDE PIAA-C will
deliver star-to-disk augmented image contrasts of < 10E-8 and a 1.2 L/D IWA or
140 mas with a wavefront control system utilizing a 2000-element MEMS DM and
fast steering mirror. EXCEDE will provide 120 mas spatial resolution at 0.4
microns with dust detection sensitivity to levels of a few tens of zodis with
two-band imaging polarimetry. EXCEDE is a science-driven technology pathfinder
that will advance our understanding of the formation and evolution of
exoplanetary systems, placing our solar system in broader astrophysical
context, and will demonstrate the high contrast technologies required for
larger-scale follow-on and multi-wavelength investigations on the road to
finding and characterizing exo-Earths in the years ahead
No Indications of Axion-Like Particles From Fermi
As very high energy (~100 GeV) gamma rays travel over cosmological distances,
their flux is attenuated through interactions with the extragalactic background
light. Observations of distant gamma ray sources at energies between ~200 GeV
and a few TeV by ground-based gamma ray telescopes such as HESS, however,
suggest that the universe is more transparent to very high energy photons than
had been anticipated. One possible explanation for this is the existence of
axion-like-particles (ALPs) which gamma rays can efficiently oscillate into,
enabling them to travel cosmological distances without attenuation. In this
article, we use data from the Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope to calculate the
spectra at 1-100 GeV of two gamma ray sources, 1ES1101-232 at redshift z=0.186
and H2356-309 at z=0.165, and use this in conjunction with the measurements of
ground-based telescopes to test the ALP hypothesis. We find that the
observations can be well-fit by an intrinsic power-law source spectrum with
indices of -1.72 and -2.1 for 1ES1101-232 and H2356-309, respectively, and that
no ALPs or other exotic physics is necessary to explain the observed degree of
attenuation.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. v3: Matches published version, the analysis of
H2356-309 is revised, no change in conclusion
K0s and \Lambda\ production in Pb--Pb collisions with the ALICE experiment
We present the study of K0s and Lambda production performed with the ALICE
experiment at the LHC in Pb--Pb collisions at \sqrt{s_NN}=2.76 TeV and pp
collisions at \sqrt{s}=0.9 and 7 TeV. The K0s and Lambda particles are
reconstructed via their V0 decay topology allowing their identification up to
high transverse momenta. The corresponding baryon/meson ratios as a function of
transverse momentum are extracted for Pb--Pb collisions in centrality bins and
in the transverse momentum range from 1 to 6 GeV/c. They are also compared with
those measured in pp events at the LHC energies of 0.9 and 7 TeV as well as in
Au--Au collisions at \sqrt{s_NN} = 62.4 and 200 GeV from RHIC.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceedings of Quark Matter 2011 (May 23rd-28th
2011, Annecy, France
Experimental study of a low-order wavefront sensor for the high-contrast coronagraphic imager EXCEDE
The mission EXCEDE (EXoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and Disk
Explorer), selected by NASA for technology development, is designed to study
the formation, evolution and architectures of exoplanetary systems and
characterize circumstellar environments into stellar habitable zones. It is
composed of a 0.7 m telescope equipped with a Phase-Induced Amplitude
Apodization Coronagraph (PIAA-C) and a 2000-element MEMS deformable mirror,
capable of raw contrasts of 1e-6 at 1.2 lambda/D and 1e-7 above 2 lambda/D. One
of the key challenges to achieve those contrasts is to remove low-order
aberrations, using a Low-Order WaveFront Sensor (LOWFS). An experiment
simulating the starlight suppression system is currently developed at NASA Ames
Research Center, and includes a LOWFS controlling tip/tilt modes in real time
at 500 Hz. The LOWFS allowed us to reduce the tip/tilt disturbances to 1e-3
lambda/D rms, enhancing the previous contrast by a decade, to 8e-7 between 1.2
and 2 lambda/D. A Linear Quadratic Gaussian (LQG) controller is currently
implemented to improve even more that result by reducing residual vibrations.
This testbed shows that a good knowledge of the low-order disturbances is a key
asset for high contrast imaging, whether for real-time control or for post
processing.Comment: 12 pages, 20 figures, proceeding of the SPIE conference
Optics+Photonics, San Diego 201
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