6,916 research outputs found
Mid-infrared size survey of Young Stellar Objects: Description of Keck segment-tilting experiment and basic results
The mid-infrared properties of pre-planetary disks are sensitive to the
temperature and flaring profiles of disks for the regions where planet
formation is expected to occur. In order to constrain theories of planet
formation, we have carried out a mid-infrared (wavelength 10.7 microns) size
survey of young stellar objects using the segmented Keck telescope in a novel
configuration. We introduced a customized pattern of tilts to individual mirror
segments to allow efficient sparse-aperture interferometry, allowing full
aperture synthesis imaging with higher calibration precision than traditional
imaging. In contrast to previous surveys on smaller telescopes and with poorer
calibration precision, we find most objects in our sample are partially
resolved. Here we present the main observational results of our survey of 5
embedded massive protostars, 25 Herbig Ae/Be stars, 3 T Tauri stars, 1 FU Ori
system, and 5 emission-line objects of uncertain classification. The observed
mid-infrared sizes do not obey the size-luminosity relation found at
near-infrared wavelengths and a companion paper will provide further modelling
analysis of this sample. In addition, we report imaging results for a few of
the most resolved objects, including complex emission around embedded massive
protostars, the photoevaporating circumbinary disk around MWC 361A, and the
subarcsecond binaries T Tau, FU Ori and MWC 1080.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysical Journal. 38 pages. 9 figure
A Data Exchange Standard for Optical (Visible/IR) Interferometry
This paper describes the OI Exchange Format, a standard for exchanging
calibrated data from optical (visible/infrared) stellar interferometers. The
standard is based on the Flexible Image Transport System (FITS), and supports
storage of the optical interferometric observables including squared visibility
and closure phase -- data products not included in radio interferometry
standards such as UV-FITS. The format has already gained the support of most
currently-operating optical interferometer projects, including COAST, NPOI,
IOTA, CHARA, VLTI, PTI, and the Keck Interferometer, and is endorsed by the IAU
Working Group on Optical Interferometry. Software is available for reading,
writing and merging OI Exchange Format files.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur
The properties of Low Surface Brightness galaxies
A description is given of the samples of Low Surface Brightness galaxies
(LSBs) used for comparison with models of their chemical and
spectro-photometric evolution (Boissier et al., this Volume). These samples
show the large variation and scatter in observed global properties of LSBs,
some of which cannot be modeled without adding starbursts or truncations to
their star formation history.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the Euroconference on The Evolution
of Galaxies: III. From simple approaches to self-consistent models (Kluwer).
4 page
KOI-1003: A new spotted, eclipsing RS CVn binary in the Kepler field
Using the high-precision photometry from the Kepler space telescope,
thousands of stars with stellar and planetary companions have been observed.
The characterization of stars with companions is not always straightforward and
can be contaminated by systematic and stellar influences on the light curves.
Here, through a detailed analysis of starspots and eclipses, we identify
KOI-1003 as a new, active RS CVn star---the first identified with data from
Kepler. The Kepler light curve of this close binary system exhibits the
system's primary transit, secondary eclipse, and starspot evolution of two
persistent active longitudes. The near equality of the system's orbital and
rotation periods indicates the orbit and primary star's rotation are nearly
synchronized ( days; days). By assuming the secondary star is on the main sequence, we suggest
the system consists of a subgiant primary and
a main-sequence companion. Our work gives a
distance of pc and an age of Gyr,
parameters which are discrepant with previous studies that included the star as
a member of the open cluster NGC 6791.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures, accepted to Ap
- …