352 research outputs found
Resolved images of the protoplanetary disk around HD 100546 with ALMA
The disk around the Herbig Ae/Be star HD 100546 has been extensively studied
and it is one of the systems for which there are observational indications of
ongoing and/or recent planet formation. However, up until now no resolved image
of the millimeter dust emission or the gas has been published. We present the
first resolved images of the disk around HD 100546 obtained in Band 7 with the
ALMA observatory. The CO (3-2) image reveals a gas disk that extends out to 350
au radius at the 3-sigma level. Surprisingly, the 870um dust continuum emission
is compact (radius <60 au) and asymmetric. The dust emission is well matched by
a truncated disk with outer radius of 50 au. The lack of
millimeter-sized particles outside the 60 au is consistent with radial drift of
particles of this size. The protoplanet candidate, identified in previous
high-contrast NACO/VLT L' observations, could be related to the sharp outer
edge of the millimeter-sized particles. Future higher angular resolution ALMA
observations are needed to determine the detailed properties of the millimeter
emission and the gas kinematics in the inner region (<2arcsec). Such
observations could also reveal the presence of a planet through the detection
of circumplanetary disk material.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted in ApJ
Manejo florestal comunitário madeireiro na região Transamazônica.
bitstream/item/38633/1/ManejFlorestalcomunitario.pdfCartilha
A pecuária na fronteira agrícola da Amazônia: o caso do município de Uruará, PA, na região da Transamazônica.
A região da Transamazônica e o município de Uruará metodologia. O sistema de produção agrícola de Uruará. O produtor. Tamanho dos estabelecimentos, mão-de-obra e gestão. Estrutura do sistema de produção. A pecuária. O processo de pecuarização. A pastagem. O Rebanho. Tendencia da pecuária em Uruará. Relações da pecuária no sistema de produção. A tipologia do sistema de produção de Uruará.bitstream/item/60974/1/CPATU-Doc87.pd
Direct imaging constraints on planet populations detected by microlensing
Results from gravitational microlensing suggested the existence of a large
population of free-floating planetary mass objects. The main conclusion from
this work was partly based on constraints from a direct imaging survey. This
survey determined upper limits for the frequency of stars that harbor giant
exoplanets at large orbital separations. Aims. We want to verify to what extent
upper limits from direct imaging do indeed constrain the microlensing results.
We examine the current derivation of the upper limits used in the microlensing
study and re-analyze the data from the corresponding imaging survey. We focus
on the mass and semi-major axis ranges that are most relevant in context of the
microlensing results. We also consider new results from a recent M-dwarf
imaging survey as these objects are typically the host stars for planets
detected by microlensing. We find that the upper limits currently applied in
context of the microlensing results are probably underestimated. This means
that a larger fraction of stars than assumed may harbor gas giant planets at
larger orbital separations. Also, the way the upper limit is currently used to
estimate the fraction of free-floating objects is not strictly correct. If the
planetary surface density of giant planets around M-dwarfs is described as
df_Planet ~ a^beta da, we find that beta ~ 0.5 - 0.6 is consistent with results
from different observational studies probing semi-major axes between ~0.03 - 30
AU. Having a higher upper limit on the fraction of stars that may have gas
giant planets at orbital separations probed by the microlensing data implies
that more of the planets detected in the microlensing study are potentially
bound to stars rather than free-floating. The current observational data are
consistent with a rising planetary surface density for giant exoplanets around
M-dwarfs out to ~30 AU.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A as Research Note, 3 page
Confirmation of the planet around HD 95086 by direct imaging
VLT/NaCo angular differential imaging at L' (3.8 microns) revealed a probable
giant planet comoving with the young and early-type HD 95086 also known to
harbor an extended debris disk. The discovery was based on the proper motion
analysis of two datasets spanning 15 months. However, the second dataset
suffered from bad atmospheric conditions, which limited the significance of the
redetection at the 3 sigma level. In this Letter, we report new VLT/NaCo
observations of HD 95086 obtained on 2013 June 26-27 at L' to recover the
planet candidate. We unambiguously redetect the companion HD 95086 b with
multiple independent pipelines at a signal-to-noise ratio greater than or equal
to 5. Combined with previously reported measurements, our astrometry decisively
shows that the planet is comoving with HD 95086 and inconsistent with a
background object. With a revised mass of 5 pm 2 Jupiter masses, estimated from
its L' photometry and "hot-start" models at 17 pm 4 Myr, HD 95086 b becomes a
new benchmark for further physical and orbital characterization of young giant
planets.Comment: accepted for publication to AP
Dust rings and filaments around the isolated young star V1331 Cygni
We characterize the small and large scale environment of the young star V1331
Cygni with high resolution HST/WFPC2 and Digitized Sky Survey images. In
addition to a previously known outer dust ring (~30'' in diameter), the
HST/WFPC2 scattered light image reveals an inner dust ring for the first time.
This ring has a maximum radius of 6.5'' and is possibly related to a molecular
envelope. Large-scale optical images show that V1331 Cyg is located at the tip
of a long dust filament linking it to the dark cloud LDN 981. We discuss the
origin of the observed dust morphology and analyze the object's relation to its
parent dark cloud LDN 981. Finally, based on recent results from the
literature, we investigate the properties of V1331 Cyg and conclude that in its
current state the object does not show suffcient evidence to be characterized
as an FU Ori object.Comment: 15 pages ApJ preprint style including 3 figures, accepted for
publication in ApJ (Feb. 2007
Parameterizing pressure-temperature profiles of exoplanet atmospheres with neural networks
Atmospheric retrievals (AR) of exoplanets typically rely on a combination of
a Bayesian inference technique and a forward simulator to estimate atmospheric
properties from an observed spectrum. A key component in simulating spectra is
the pressure-temperature (PT) profile, which describes the thermal structure of
the atmosphere. Current AR pipelines commonly use ad hoc fitting functions here
that limit the retrieved PT profiles to simple approximations, but still use a
relatively large number of parameters. In this work, we introduce a
conceptually new, data-driven parameterization scheme for physically consistent
PT profiles that does not require explicit assumptions about the functional
form of the PT profiles and uses fewer parameters than existing methods. Our
approach consists of a latent variable model (based on a neural network) that
learns a distribution over functions (PT profiles). Each profile is represented
by a low-dimensional vector that can be used to condition a decoder network
that maps to . When training and evaluating our method on two publicly
available datasets of self-consistent PT profiles, we find that our method
achieves, on average, better fit quality than existing baseline methods,
despite using fewer parameters. In an AR based on existing literature, our
model (using two parameters) produces a tighter, more accurate posterior for
the PT profile than the five-parameter polynomial baseline, while also speeding
up the retrieval by more than a factor of three. By providing parametric access
to physically consistent PT profiles, and by reducing the number of parameters
required to describe a PT profile (thereby reducing computational cost or
freeing resources for additional parameters of interest), our method can help
improve AR and thus our understanding of exoplanet atmospheres and their
habitability.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Avaliação de forrageiras em estabelecimentos rurais de Uruará-PA, na fronteira agrícola da Amazônia.
- …