24 research outputs found
Spectral and Temporal Variability of Earth Observed in Polarization
We present a comprehensive set of spectropolarimetric observations of
Earthshine as obtained by FORS2 at the VLT for phase angles from 50degree to
135degree (Sun-Earth-Moon angle), covering a spectral range from 430nm to
920nm. The degree of polarization in BVRI passbands, the differential
polarization vegetation index, and the equivalent width of the O2A polarization
band around 760nm are determined with absolute errors around 0.1 percent in the
degree of polarization. Earthshine polarization spectra are corrected for the
effect of depolarization introduced by backscattering on the lunar surface,
introducing systematic errors of the order of 1 percent in the degree of
polarization. Distinct viewing sceneries such as observing the Atlantic or
Pacific side in Earthshine yield statistically different phase curves. The
equivalent width defined for the O2A band polarization is found to vary from
-5nm to +2nm. A differential polarized vegetation index is introduced and
reveals a larger vegetation signal for those viewing sceneries that contain
larger fractions of vegetated surface areas. We corroborate the observed
correlations with theoretical models from the literature, and conclude that the
Vegetation Red Edge(VRE) is a robust and sensitive signature in polarization
spectra of planet Earth. The overall behaviour of polarization of planet Earth
in the continuum and in the O2A band can be explained by existing models.
Biosignatures such as the O2A band and the VRE are detectable in Earthshine
polarization with a high degree of significance and sensitivity. An in-depth
understanding of Earthshines temporal and spectral variability requires
improved models of Earths biosphere, as a prerequisite to interpret possible
detections of polarised biosignatures in earthlike exoplanets in the future.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, 3 table
Optical Spectroscopy of the Surface Population of the rho Ophiuchi Molecular Cloud: The First Wave of Star Formation
We present the results of optical spectroscopy of 139 stars obtained with the
Hydra multi-object spectrograph. The objects extend over a 1.3 square degree
area surrounding the main cloud of the rho Oph complex. The objects were
selected from narrowband images to have H alpha in emission. Using the presence
of strong H alpha emission, lithium absorption, location in the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, or previously reported x-ray emission, we were
able to identify 88 objects as young stars associated with the cloud. Strong H
alpha emission was confirmed in 39 objects with line widths consistent with
their origin in magnetospheric accretion columns. Two of the strongest
emission-line objects are young, x-ray emitting brown dwarf candidates with M8
spectral types. Comparisons of the bolometric luminosities and effective
temperatures with theoretical models suggest a medianage for this population of
2.1 Myr which is signifcantly older than the ages derived for objects in the
cloud core. It appears that these stars formed contemporaneously with low mass
stars in the Upper Scorpius subgroup, likely triggered by massive stars in the
Upper-Centaurus subgroup.Comment: 35 pages of postscript which includes seven figures (some of which
are multi-panel) and four postscript tables. Astronomical Journal (in press
Resolved Spectroscopy of M Dwarf/L Dwarf Binaries. I. DENIS J220002.05-303832.9AB
We present the discovery of the common proper motion M9 + L0 binary DENIS
J220002.05-303832.9AB, identified serendipitously with the SpeX near infrared
imager/spectrograph. Spectral types are derived from resolved near infrared
spectroscopy of the well-separated (1"09+/-0"06) components and comparison to
equivalent data for M and L dwarf spectral standards. Physical association is
deduced from the angular proximity of the sources, their common proper motion
and their similar spectrophotometric distances (35+/-2 pc). The estimated
distance of this pair implies a projected separation of 38+/-3 AU, wider than
typical separations for other M dwarf/L dwarf binaries, but consistent with the
maximum separation/total system mass trend previously identified by Burgasser
et al. (2003). We discuss the DENIS 2200-3038AB system in context with other
low mass binaries, and its role in studying dust formation processes and
activity trends across the transition between the M and L dwarf spectral
classes.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomical Journa
Visual Binaries in the Orion Nebula Cluster
We have carried out a major survey for visual binaries towards the Orion
Nebula Cluster using HST images obtained with an H-alpha filter. Among 781
likely ONC members more than 60" from theta-1 Ori C, we find 78 multiple
systems (75 binaries and 3 triples), of which 55 are new discoveries, in the
range from 0.1" to 1.5". About 9 binaries are likely line-of-sight
associations. We find a binary fraction of 8.8%+-1.1% within the limited
separation range from 67.5 to 675 AU. The field binary fraction in the same
range is a factor 1.5 higher. Within the range 150 AU to 675 AU we find that T
Tauri associations have a factor 2.2 more binaries than the ONC. The binary
separation distribution function of the ONC shows unusual structure, with a
sudden steep decrease in the number of binaries as the separation increases
beyond 0.5", corresponding to 225 AU. We have measured the ratio of binaries
wider than 0.5" to binaries closer than 0.5" as a function of distance from the
Trapezium, and find that this ratio is significantly depressed in the inner
region of the ONC. The deficit of wide binaries in the central part of the
cluster is likely due to dissolution or orbital change during their passage
through the potential well of the inner cluster region. Many of the companions
are likely to be brown dwarfs.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, accepted by the Astronomical Journa
A Survey for Circumstellar Disks Around Young Substellar Objects
(Abridged) We have completed the first systematic survey for disks around
spectroscopically identified young brown dwarfs and very low mass stars. We
have obtained L'-band (3.8 um) imaging for 38 very cool objects in IC 348 and
Taurus. Our targets span spectral types from M6 to M9.5 (~100 to ~15 Mjup).
Using the objects' measured spectral types and extinctions, we find that most
of our sample (77%+/-15%) possess intrinsic IR excesses, indicative of disks.
Because the excesses are modest, conventional analyses using only IR colors
would have missed most of the sources with excesses. The observed IR excesses
are correlated with Halpha emission, consistent with a common accretion disk
origin. The excesses can be explained by disk reprocessing of starlight alone;
the implied accretion rates are at least an order of magnitude below typical
values for classical T Tauri stars. The observed distribution of IR excesses
suggests the presence of inner disk holes. The disk frequency appears to be
independent of the mass and age. In the same star-forming regions, disks around
brown dwarfs are at least as long-lived (~3 Myr) as disks around the T Tauri
stars. Altogether, the frequency and properties of young circumstellar disks
appear to be similar from the stellar regime down to the substellar and
planetary-mass regime. This provides prima facie evidence of a common origin
for most stars and brown dwarfs.Comment: ApJ, in press, 28 pages. Minor change to the online, abridged version
of the abstract. No change to the actual pape
Ten-Micron Observations of Nearby Young Stars
(abridged) We present new 10-micron photometry of 21 nearby young stars
obtained at the Palomar 5-meter and at the Keck I 10-meter telescopes as part
of a program to search for dust in the habitable zone of young stars. Thirteen
of the stars are in the F-K spectral type range ("solar analogs"), 4 have B or
A spectral types, and 4 have spectral type M. We confirm existing IRAS
12-micron and ground-based 10-micron photometry for 10 of the stars, and
present new insight into this spectral regime for the rest. Excess emission at
10 micron is not found in any of the young solar analogs, except for a possible
2.4-sigma detection in the G5V star HD 88638. The G2V star HD 107146, which
does not display a 10-micron excess, is identified as a new Vega-like
candidate, based on our 10-micron photospheric detection, combined with
previously unidentified 60-micron and 100-micron IRAS excesses. Among the
early-type stars, a 10-micron excess is detected only in HD 109573A (HR 4796A),
confirming prior observations; among the M dwarfs, excesses are confirmed in AA
Tau, CD -40 8434, and Hen 3-600A. A previously suggested N band excess in the
M3 dwarf CD -33 7795 is shown to be consistent with photospheric emission.Comment: 40 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables. To appear in the January 1, 2004 issue
of Ap