44 research outputs found
A Search for Planets Transiting the M Dwarf Debris Disk Host, AU Microscopii
We present high cadence, high precision multi-band photometry of the young,
M1Ve, debris disk star, AU Microscopii. The data were obtained in three
continuum filters spanning a wavelength range from 4500\AA to 6600\AA, plus
H, over 28 nights in 2005. The lightcurves show intrinsic stellar
variability due to starspots with an amplitude in the blue band of 0.051
magnitudes and a period of 4.847 days. In addition, three large flares were
detected in the data which all occur near the minimum brightness of the star.
We remove the intrinsic stellar variability and combine the lightcurves of all
the filters in order to search for transits by possible planetary companions
orbiting in the plane of the nearly edge-on debris disk. The combined final
lightcurve has a sampling of 0.35 minutes and a standard deviation of 6.8
millimags (mmag). We performed Monte Carlo simulations by adding fake transits
to the observed lightcurve and find with 95% significance that there are no
Jupiter mass planets orbiting in the plane of the debris disk on circular
orbits with periods, P days. In addition, there are no young
Neptune-like planets (with radii 2.5 smaller than the young Jupiter) on
circular orbits with periods, P days.Comment: accepted to MNRA
Exo-zodiacal disk mapper: a space interferometer to detect and map zodiacal disks around nearby stars
We propose a concept for a space mission designed to make a survey of potential zodiacal dust disks around nearby stars in the mid-IR. We show that a 10-meter baseline nulling interferometer with two 0.6-meter apertures located in a 1 X 1 AU heliocentric orbit would allow for the survey of about 400 stars in the solar neighborhood and permit a first order determination of the disk inclination and of the dust density and temperature radius dependence. The high dynamic range of the instrument may also be used to study an additional astrophysical phenomena. Beyond its own scientific merit, such a mission would also serve as a technological precursor to a larger interferometer of the type being considered for the detection of earth-like planets
HST and Palomar Imaging of GRB 990123: Implications for the Nature of Gamma-Ray Bursts and their Hosts
We report on HST and Palomar optical images of the field of GRB 990123,
obtained on 8 and 9 February 1999. We find that the optical transient (OT)
associated with GRB 990123 is located on an irregular galaxy, with magnitude
V=24.20 +/- 0.15. The strong metal absorption lines seen in the spectrum of the
OT, along with the low probability of a chance superposition, lead us to
conclude that this galaxy is the host of the GRB. The OT is projected within
the ~1'' visible stellar field of the host, nearer the edge than the center. We
cannot, on this basis, rule out the galactic nucleus as the site of the GRB,
since the unusual morphology of the host may be the result of an ongoing
galactic merger, but our demonstration that this host galaxy has extremely blue
optical to infrared colors more strongly supports an association between GRBs
and star formation. We find that the OT magnitude on 1999 Feb 9.05, V = 25.45
+/- 0.15, is about 1.5 mag fainter than expected from extrapolation of the
decay rate found in earlier observations. A detailed analysis of the OT light
curve suggests that its fading has gone through three distinct phases: an early
rapid decline (f_{nu} \propto t^{-1.6} for t < 0.1 days), a slower intermediate
decline power-law decay (f_{nu} \propto t^{-1.1} for 0.1 < t < 2 days), and
then a more rapid decay (at least as steep as (f_{\nu} \propto t^{-1.8} for t >
2 days). The break to steeper slope at late times may provide evidence that the
optical emission from this GRB was highly beamed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal (Letters). Fourteen
pages. Three encapsulated figure
Variable Point Sources in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82. I. Project Description and Initial Catalog (0 h < R.A. < 4 h)
We report the first results of a study of variable point sources identified
using multi-color time-series photometry from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)
Stripe 82 over a span of nearly 10 years (1998-2007). We construct a
light-curve catalog of 221,842 point sources in the R.A. 0-4 h half of Stripe
82, limited to r = 22.0, that have at least 10 detections in the ugriz bands
and color errors of < 0.2 mag. These objects are then classified by color and
by cross-matching them to existing SDSS catalogs of interesting objects. We use
inhomogeneous ensemble differential photometry techniques to greatly improve
our sensitivity to variability. Robust variable identification methods are used
to extract 6520 variable candidates in this dataset, resulting in an overall
variable fraction of ~2.9% at the level of 0.05 mag variability. A search for
periodic variables results in the identification of 30 eclipsing/ellipsoidal
binary candidates, 55 RR Lyrae, and 16 Delta Scuti variables. We also identify
2704 variable quasars matched to the SDSS Quasar catalog (Schneider et al.
2007), as well as an additional 2403 quasar candidates identified by their
non-stellar colors and variability properties. Finally, a sample of 11,328
point sources that appear to be nonvariable at the limits of our sensitivity is
also discussed. (Abridged.)Comment: 67 pages, 27 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJS. Catalog
available at http://shrike.pha.jhu.edu/stripe82-variable
The optical counterpart to gamma-ray burst GRB970228 observed using the Hubble Space Telescope
Although more than 2,000 astronomical gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been
detected, and numerous models proposed to explain their occurrence, they have
remained enigmatic owing to the lack of an obvious counterpart at other
wavelengths. The recent ground-based detection of a transient source in the
vicinity of GRB 970228 may therefore have provided a breakthrough. The optical
counterpart appears to be embedded in an extended source which, if a galaxy as
has been suggested, would lend weight to those models that place GRBs at
cosmological distances. Here we report the observations using the Hubble Space
Telescope of the transient counterpart and extended source 26 and 39 days after
the initial gamma-ray outburst. We find that the counterpart has faded since
the initial detection (and continues to fade), but the extended source exhibits
no significant change in brightness between the two dates of observations
reported here. The size and apparent constancy between the two epochs of HST
observations imply that it is extragalactic, but its faintness makes a
definitive statement about its nature difficult. Nevertheless, the decay
profile of the transient source is consistent with a popular impulsive-fireball
model, which assumes a merger between two neutron stars in a distant galaxy.Comment: 11 pages + 2 figures. To appear in Nature (29 May 1997 issue
Observations of GRB 970228 and GRB 970508, and the Neutron-Star Merger Model
We present the discovery observations for the optical counterpart of the
-ray burster GRB 970508 and discuss its light curve in the context of
the fireball model. We analyze the HST data for this object, and conclude that
any underlying galaxy must be fainter than = 25.5. We also present a
detailed analysis of the HST images of GRB 970228 claimed to show a proper
motion of the optical counterpart and conclude that, within the uncertainties,
there is no proper motion. We examine several aspects of the neutron-star
merger model for -ray bursts. In particular, we use this model to
predict the redshift distribution of -ray bursters, and adopting a
recent determination of the cosmic star-formation history, we show that the
predicted distribution of relation is consistent with that
observed for GRBs.Comment: (6 figures). Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journa
Exo-zodiacal disk mapper: a space interferometer to detect and map zodiacal disks around nearby stars
We propose a concept for a space mission designed to make a survey of potential zodiacal dust disks around nearby stars in the mid-IR. We show that a 10-meter baseline nulling interferometer with two 0.6-meter apertures located in a 1 X 1 AU heliocentric orbit would allow for the survey of about 400 stars in the solar neighborhood and permit a first order determination of the disk inclination and of the dust density and temperature radius dependence. The high dynamic range of the instrument may also be used to study an additional astrophysical phenomena. Beyond its own scientific merit, such a mission would also serve as a technological precursor to a larger interferometer of the type being considered for the detection of earth-like planets
The Fading Optical Counterpart of GRB~970228, Six Months and One Year Later
We report on observations of the fading optical counterpart of the gamma-ray
burst GRB 970228, made with the Hubble Space Telescope STIS CCD approximately
six months after outburst and with the HST/NICMOS and Keck/NIRC approximately
one year after outburst. The unresolved counterpart is detected by STIS at
V=28.0 +/- 0.25, consistent with a continued power-law decline with exponent
-1.14 +/- 0.05. The counterpart is located within, but near the edge of, a
faint extended source with diameter ~0."8 and integrated magnitude V=25.8 +/-
0.25. A reanalysis of HST and NTT observations performed shortly after the
burst shows no evidence of proper motion of the point source or fading of the
extended emission. Only the extended source is visible in the NICMOS images
with a magnitude of H=23.3 +/- 0.1. The Keck observations find K = 22.8 +/-
0.3. Several distinct and independent means of deriving the foreground
extinction in the direction of GRB 970228 all agree with A_V = 0.75 +/- 0.2.
After adjusting for Galactic extinction, we find that the size of the observed
extended emission is consistent with that of galaxies of comparable magnitude
found in the Hubble Deep Field (HDF) and other deep HST images. Only 2% of the
sky is covered by galaxies of similar or greater surface brightness; therefore
the extended source is almost certainly the host galaxy. Additionally, we find
that the extinction-corrected V - H and V - K colors of the host are as blue as
any galaxy of comparable or brighter magnitude in the HDF. Taken in concert
with recent observations of GRB 970508, GRB 971214, and GRB 980703 our work
suggests that all four GRBs with spectroscopic identification or deep
multicolor broad-band imaging of the host lie in rapidly star-forming galaxies.Comment: 24 pages, Latex, 4 PostScript figures, to appear in the May 10 issue
of The Astrophysical Journal (Note: displayed abstract is abridged
The Hubble Deep Field: Observations, Data Reduction, and Galaxy Photometry
The Hubble Deep Field (HDF) is a Director's Discretionary program on HST in
Cycle 5 to image an undistinguished field at high Galactic latitude in four
passbands as deeply as reasonably possible. These images provide the most
detailed view to date of distant field galaxies and are likely to be important
for a wide range of studies in galaxy evolution and cosmology. In order to
optimize observing in the time available, a field in the northern continuous
viewing zone was selected and images were taken for ten consecutive days, or
approximately 150 orbits. Shorter 1-2 orbit images were obtained of the fields
immediately adjacent to the primary HDF in order to facilitate spectroscopic
follow-up by ground-based telescopes. The observations were made from 18 to 30
December 1995, and both raw and reduced data have been put in the public domain
as a community service.
We present a summary of the criteria for selecting the field, the rationale
behind the filter selection and observing times in each band, and the
strategies for planning the observations to maximize the exposure time while
avoiding earth-scattered light. Data reduction procedures are outlined, and
images of the combined frames in each band are presented. Objects detected in
these images are listed in a catalog with their basic photometric parameters.Comment: 37 pages, XX PostScript figures, uses aaspp4.sty astrobib.sty.
(Astrobib is available from http://www.stsci.edu/software/TeX.html .) To
appear the Astronomical Journal. More info on the Hubble deep field can be
found at http://www.stsci.edu/../ftp/observer/hdf/hdf.html . More figures
(images) can be found at
http://www.stsci.edu/../ftp/observer/hdf/references/williams/ and the full
source catalog is available at
http://www.stsci.edu/../ftp/observer/hdf/archive/v2catalog