263 research outputs found
High-resolution IR and radio observations of AGB stars
Aims. We present the results of observations with interferometers of a sample of pulsating asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars in the infrared and at radio wavelengths. The goal of these observations is to explore the extended stellar atmospheres and to establish links between the spatial scales of molecular envelopes and of the dust shell. This is the key to better understand the process of dust formation and therefore of mass loss.
Methods. We used the ESO VLTI/MIDI interferometer in the N band, the Keck Interferometer in the K band, and NRAO VLBA observations of SiO masers at 7 mm wavelength of a sample of AGB stars: U Ari, W Cnc, RX Tau, RT Tau, RT Aql, S Ser, and V Mon. The various instruments probe different altitudes of the atmosphere of the AGB stars. They are sensitive to regions below the silicate dust condensation distance and provide the opportunity of finding hints about how dust and its precursors form in the extended atmosphere of an AGB star. The K-band observations are sensitive to water and carbon-monoxyde vapors. Unfortunately, we were only able to observe S Ser in this wavelength range.
Results. We find a ratio of 2.2 between the molecular envelope radius and the photospheric size, which is consistent with previous results. The N-band observations are mostly sensitive to vapors of SiO and water and to dust (alumina and silicate). The silicate dust shell is fully resolved, and no precise parameters can be deduced from the N-band observations other than a spatial extension of at least 12–16 R⋆ for our sample. The sizes found for the SiO region are consistent with the radii of the SiO maser rings provided by the VLBA observations. The sizes of the alumina and water vapor regions are systematically found to be larger. There is clear evidence that SiO is absent from regions farther from the star where silicate dust condenses.
Conclusions. These observations support a possible scenario in which SiO is adsorbed by species such as corundum. An alternative explanation could be that SiO has chemically disappeared at this range of distances
Imaging faint brown dwarf companions close to bright stars with a small, well-corrected telescope aperture
We have used our 1.6 m diameter off-axis well-corrected sub-aperture (WCS) on
the Palomar Hale telescope in concert with a small inner-working-angle (IWA)
phase-mask coronagraph to image the immediate environs of a small number of
nearby stars. Test cases included three stars (HD 130948, HD 49197 and HR7672)
with known brown dwarf companions at small separations, all of which were
detected. We also present the initial detection of a new object close to the
nearby young G0V star HD171488. Follow up observations are needed to determine
if this object is a bona fide companion, but its flux is consistent with the
flux of a young brown dwarf or low mass M star at the same distance as the
primary. Interestingly, at small angles our WCS coronagraph demonstrates a
limiting detectable contrast comparable to that of extant Lyot coronagraphs on
much larger telescopes corrected with current-generation AO systems. This
suggests that small apertures corrected to extreme adaptive optics (ExAO)
levels can be used to carry out initial surveys for close brown dwarf and
stellar companions, leaving followup observations for larger telescopes.Comment: accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
New Constraints on Companions and Dust within a Few AU of Vega
We report on high contrast near-infrared (~2.2 μm) observations of Vega obtained with the Palomar Fiber Nuller, a dual sub-aperture rotating coronagraph installed at the Palomar Hale telescope. The data show consistent astrophysical null depth measurements at the 10^(–3) level or below for three different baseline orientations spanning 60 deg in azimuth, with individual 1σ uncertainties ≤7 × 10^(–4). These high cancellation and accuracy levels translate into a dynamic range greater than 1000:1 inside the diffraction limit of the 5 m telescope beam. Such high contrast performance is unprecedented in the near-infrared and provides improved constraints on Vega's immediate ( 20 to 250 mas, or 0.15 to 2 AU) environment. In particular, our measurements rule out any potential companion in the [0.25-1 AU] region contributing more than 1% of the overall near-infrared stellar flux, with limits as low as 0.2% near 0.6 AU. These are the best upper limits established so far by direct detection for a companion to Vega in this inner region. We also conclude that any dust population contributing a significant (≥1%) near-infrared thermal excess can arise only within 0.2 AU of the star, and that it must consist of much smaller grains than in the solar zodiacal cloud. Dust emission from farther than 2 AU is also not ruled out by our observations, but would have to originate in strong scattering, pointing again to very small grains
Improving Interferometric Null Depth Measurements using Statistical Distributions: Theory and First Results with the Palomar Fiber Nuller
A new "self-calibrated" statistical analysis method has been developed for
the reduction of nulling interferometry data. The idea is to use the
statistical distributions of the fluctuating null depth and beam intensities to
retrieve the astrophysical null depth (or equivalently the object's visibility)
in the presence of fast atmospheric fluctuations. The approach yields an
accuracy much better (about an order of magnitude) than is presently possible
with standard data reduction methods, because the astrophysical null depth
accuracy is no longer limited by the magnitude of the instrumental phase and
intensity errors but by uncertainties on their probability distributions. This
approach was tested on the sky with the two-aperture fiber nulling instrument
mounted on the Palomar Hale telescope. Using our new data analysis approach
alone-and no observations of calibrators-we find that error bars on the
astrophysical null depth as low as a few 10-4 can be obtained in the
near-infrared, which means that null depths lower than 10-3 can be reliably
measured. This statistical analysis is not specific to our instrument and may
be applicable to other interferometers
Exploring Intermediate (5-40 au) Scales around AB Aurigae with the Palomar Fiber Nuller
We report on recent Ks-band interferometric observations of the young pre-main-sequence star AB Aurigae obtained with the Palomar Fiber Nuller (PFN). Reaching a contrast of a few 10^−4 inside a field of view extending from 35 to 275 mas (5–40 AU at AB Aur's distance), the PFN is able to explore angular scales that are intermediate between those accessed by coronagraphic imaging and long baseline interferometry. This intermediate region is of special interest given that many young stellar objects are believed to harbor extended halos at such angular scales. Using destructive interference (nulling) between two sub-apertures of the Palomar 200 inch telescope and rotating the telescope pupil, we measured a resolved circumstellar excess at all probed azimuth angles. The astrophysical null measured over the full rotation is fairly constant, with a mean value of 1.52%, and a slight additional azimuthal modulation of ±0.2%. The isotropic astrophysical null is indicative of circumstellar emission dominated by an azimuthally extended source, possibly a halo, or one or more rings of dust, accounting for several percent of the total Ks-band flux. The modest azimuthal variation may be explained by some skewness or anisotropy of the spatially extended source, e.g., an elliptical or spiral geometry, or clumping, but it could also be due to the presence of a point source located at a separation of ~120 mas (17 AU) with ~6 × 10^−3 of the stellar flux. We combine our results with previous Infrared Optical Telescope Array observations of AB Aur at H band, and demonstrate that a dust ring located at ~30 mas (4.3 AU) represents the best-fitting model to explain both sets of visibilities. We are also able to test a few previously hypothesized models of the incoherent component evident at longer interferometric baselines
Mid-infrared laser light nulling experiment using single-mode conductive waveguides
Aims: In the context of space interferometry missions devoted to the search
of exo-Earths, this paper investigates the capabilities of new single mode
conductive waveguides at providing modal filtering in an infrared and
monochromatic nulling experiment; Methods: A Michelson laser interferometer
with a co-axial beam combination scheme at 10.6 microns is used. After
introducing a Pi phase shift using a translating mirror, dynamic and static
measurements of the nulling ratio are performed in the two cases where modal
filtering is implemented and suppressed. No additional active control of the
wavefront errors is involved. Results: We achieve on average a statistical
nulling ratio of 2.5e-4 with a 1-sigma upper limit of 6e-4, while a best null
of 5.6e-5 is obtained in static mode. At the moment, the impact of external
vibrations limits our ability to maintain the null to 10 to 20 seconds.;
Conclusions: A positive effect of SM conductive waveguide on modal filtering
has been observed in this study. Further improvement of the null should be
possible with proper mechanical isolation of the setup.Comment: Accepted in A&A, 7 pages, 5 figure
Interferometric observations of the supergiant stars alpha Orionis and alpha Herculis with FLUOR at IOTA
We report the observations in the K band of the red supergiant star alpha
Orionis and of the bright giant star alpha Herculis with the FLUOR beamcombiner
at the IOTA interferometer. The high quality of the data allows us to estimate
limb-darkening and derive precise diameters in the K band which combined with
bolometric fluxes yield effective temperatures. In the case of Betelgeuse, data
collected at high spatial frequency although sparse are compatible with
circular symmetry and there is no clear evidence for departure from circular
symmetry. We have combined the K band data with interferometric measurements in
the L band and at 11.15 micron. The full set of data can be explained if a 2055
K layer with optical depths ,
and is added 0.33 above the
photosphere providing a first consistent view of the star in this range of
wavelengths. This layer provides a consistent explanation for at least three
otherwise puzzling observations: the wavelength variation of apparent diameter,
the dramatic difference in limb darkening between the two supergiant stars, and
the previously noted reduced effective temperature of supergiants with respect
to giants of the same spectral type. Each of these may be simply understood as
an artifact due to not accounting for the presence of the upper layer in the
data analysis. This consistent picture can be considered strong support for the
presence of a sphere of warm water vapor, proposed by Tsuji (2000) when
interpreting the spectra of strong molecular lines.Comment: Accepter for publication by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Extreme adaptive optics imaging with a clear and well-corrected off-axis telescope sub-aperture
Rather than using an adaptive optics (AO) system to correct a telescope s
entire pupil, it can instead be used to more finely correct a smaller
sub-aperture. Indeed, existing AO systems can be used to correct a sub-aperture
1/3 to 1/2 the size of a 5-10 m telescope to extreme adaptive optics (ExAO)
levels. We discuss the potential performance of a clear off-axis well-corrected
sub-aperture (WCS), and describe our initial imaging results with a 1.5 m
diameter WCS on the Palomar Observatory s Hale telescope. These include
measured Strehl ratios of 0.92-0.94 in the infrared (2.17 microns), and 0.12 in
the B band, the latter allowing a binary of separation 0.34 arc sec to be
easily resolved in the blue. Such performance levels enable a variety of novel
observational modes, such as infrared ExAO, visible-wavelength AO, and
high-contrast coronagraphy. One specific application suggested by the high
Strehl ratio stability obtained (1%) is the measurement of planetary transits
and eclipses. Also described is a simple dark-hole experiment carried out on a
binary star, in which a comatic phase term was applied directly to the
deformable mirror, in order to shift the diffraction rings to one side of the
point spread function.Comment: accepted by Ap
Simultaneous Water Vapor and Dry Air Optical Path Length Measurements and Compensation with the Large Binocular Telescope Interferometer
The Large Binocular Telescope Interferometer uses a near-infrared camera to
measure the optical path length variations between the two AO-corrected
apertures and provide high-angular resolution observations for all its science
channels (1.5-13 m). There is however a wavelength dependent component to
the atmospheric turbulence, which can introduce optical path length errors when
observing at a wavelength different from that of the fringe sensing camera.
Water vapor in particular is highly dispersive and its effect must be taken
into account for high-precision infrared interferometric observations as
described previously for VLTI/MIDI or the Keck Interferometer Nuller. In this
paper, we describe the new sensing approach that has been developed at the LBT
to measure and monitor the optical path length fluctuations due to dry air and
water vapor separately. After reviewing the current performance of the system
for dry air seeing compensation, we present simultaneous H-, K-, and N-band
observations that illustrate the feasibility of our feedforward approach to
stabilize the path length fluctuations seen by the LBTI nuller.Comment: SPIE conference proceeding
Discovery of a Low-mass Companion Around HR 3549
We report the discovery of a low-mass companion to HR 3549, an A0V star surrounded by a debris disk with a warm excess detected by WISE at 22 μm (10σ significance). We imaged HR 3549 B in the L band with NAOS-CONICA, the adaptive optics infrared camera of the Very Large Telescope, in January 2013 and confirmed its common proper motion in 2015 January. The companion is at a projected separation of ≃80 AU and position angle of ≃157°, so it is orbiting well beyond the warm disk inner edge of r > 10 AU. Our age estimate for this system corresponds to a companion mass in the range 15–80 M_J, spanning the brown dwarf regime, and so HR 3549 B is another recent addition to the growing list of brown dwarf desert objects with extreme mass ratios. The simultaneous presence of a warm disk and a brown dwarf around HR 3549 provides interesting empirical constraints on models of the formation of substellar companions
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