60 research outputs found
Magellan Adaptive Optics first-light observations of the exoplanet beta Pic b. II. 3-5 micron direct imaging with MagAO+Clio, and the empirical bolometric luminosity of a self-luminous giant planet
Young giant exoplanets are a unique laboratory for understanding cool,
low-gravity atmospheres. A quintessential example is the massive extrasolar
planet Pic b, which is 9 AU from and embedded in the debris disk of the
young nearby A6V star Pictoris. We observed the system with first light
of the Magellan Adaptive Optics (MagAO) system. In Paper I we presented the
first CCD detection of this planet with MagAO+VisAO. Here we present four
MagAO+Clio images of Pic b at 3.1 m, 3.3 m, , and
, including the first observation in the fundamental CH band. To
remove systematic errors from the spectral energy distribution (SED), we
re-calibrate the literature photometry and combine it with our own data, for a
total of 22 independent measurements at 16 passbands from 0.99--4.8 m.
Atmosphere models demonstrate the planet is cloudy but are degenerate in
effective temperature and radius. The measured SED now covers 80\% of the
planet's energy, so we approach the bolometric luminosity empirically. We
calculate the luminosity by extending the measured SED with a blackbody and
integrating to find log(/) . From our
bolometric luminosity and an age of 233 Myr, hot-start evolutionary tracks
give a mass of 12.70.3 , radius of 1.450.02 , and
of 170823 K (model-dependent errors not included). Our
empirically-determined luminosity is in agreement with values from atmospheric
models (typically dex), but brighter than values from the field-dwarf
bolometric correction (typically dex), illustrating the limitations in
comparing young exoplanets to old brown dwarfs.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. 27 pages, 22 figures, 19 table
Imaging protoplanets: observing transition disks with non-redundant masking
Transition disks, protoplanetary disks with inner clearings, are promising
objects in which to directly image forming planets. The high contrast imaging
technique of non-redundant masking is well posed to detect planetary mass
companions at several to tens of AU in nearby transition disks. We present
non-redundant masking observations of the T Cha and LkCa 15 transition disks,
both of which host posited sub-stellar mass companions. However, due to a loss
of information intrinsic to the technique, observations of extended sources
(e.g. scattered light from disks) can be misinterpreted as moving companions.
We discuss tests to distinguish between these two scenarios, with applications
to the T Cha and LkCa 15 observations. We argue that a static,
forward-scattering disk can explain the T Cha data, while LkCa 15 is best
explained by multiple orbiting companions.Comment: SPIE conference proceedin
MagAO Imaging of Long-period Objects (MILO). II. A Puzzling White Dwarf around the Sun-like Star HD 11112
The version of record, Rodigas, T. J. et al, 'MagAO Imaging of long-period objects (MILO). II. A puzzling white dwarf around the sun-like star HD 11112', The Astrophysical Journal, 831:177, November 2016, is available online via doi: 10.3847/0004-637X/831/2/177 © 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.HD 11112 is an old, Sun-like star that has a long-term radial velocity (RV) trend indicative of a massive companion on a wide orbit. Here we present direct images of the source responsible for the trend using the Magellan Adaptive Optics system. We detect the object (HD 11112B) at a separation of 2\fasec 2 (100 AU) at multiple wavelengths spanning 0.6-4 \microns ~and show that it is most likely a gravitationally-bound cool white dwarf. Modeling its spectral energy distribution (SED) suggests that its mass is 0.9-1.1 \msun, which corresponds to very high-eccentricity, near edge-on orbits from Markov chain Monte Carlo analysis of the RV and imaging data together. The total age of the white dwarf is discrepant with that of the primary star under most assumptions. The problem can be resolved if the white dwarf progenitor was initially a double white dwarf binary that then merged into the observed high-mass white dwarf. HD 11112B is a unique and intriguing benchmark object that can be used to calibrate atmospheric and evolutionary models of cool white dwarfs and should thus continue to be monitored by RV and direct imaging over the coming years.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Accreting Protoplanets in the LkCa 15 Transition Disk
Exoplanet detections have revolutionized astronomy, offering new insights
into solar system architecture and planet demographics. While nearly 1900
exoplanets have now been discovered and confirmed, none are still in the
process of formation. Transition discs, protoplanetary disks with inner
clearings best explained by the influence of accreting planets, are natural
laboratories for the study of planet formation. Some transition discs show
evidence for the presence of young planets in the form of disc asymmetries or
infrared sources detected within their clearings, as in the case of LkCa 15.
Attempts to observe directly signatures of accretion onto protoplanets have
hitherto proven unsuccessful. Here we report adaptive optics observations of
LkCa 15 that probe within the disc clearing. With accurate source positions
over multiple epochs spanning 2009 - 2015, we infer the presence of multiple
companions on Keplerian orbits. We directly detect H{\alpha} emission from the
innermost companion, LkCa 15 b, evincing hot (~10,000 K) gas falling deep into
the potential well of an accreting protoplanet.Comment: 35 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, 9 extended data item
High-contrast imaging constraints on gas giant planet formation - The Herbig Ae/Be star opportunity
Planet formation studies are often focused on solar-type stars, implicitly
considering our Sun as reference point. This approach overlooks, however, that
Herbig Ae/Be stars are in some sense much better targets to study planet
formation processes empirically, with their disks generally being larger,
brighter and simply easier to observe across a large wavelength range. In
addition, massive gas giant planets have been found on wide orbits around early
type stars, triggering the question if these objects did indeed form there and,
if so, by what process. In the following I briefly review what we currently
know about the occurrence rate of planets around intermediate mass stars,
before discussing recent results from Herbig Ae/Be stars in the context of
planet formation. The main emphasis is put on spatially resolved polarized
light images of potentially planet forming disks and how these images - in
combination with other data - can be used to empirically constrain (parts of)
the planet formation process. Of particular interest are two objects, HD100546
and HD169142, where, in addition to intriguing morphological structures in the
disks, direct observational evidence for (very) young planets has been
reported. I conclude with an outlook, what further progress we can expect in
the very near future with the next generation of high-contrast imagers at 8-m
class telescopes and their synergies with ALMA.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysics and Space Science as invited short review in
special issue about Herbig Ae/Be stars; 12 pages incl. 5 figures, 2 tables
and reference
High Resolution Images of Orbital Motion in the Orion Trapezium Cluster with the LBT Adaptive Optics System
The new 8.4m LBT adaptive secondary AO system, with its novel pyramid
wavefront sensor, was used to produce very high Strehl (75% at 2.16 microns)
near infrared narrowband (Br gamma: 2.16 microns and [FeII]: 1.64 microns)
images of 47 young (~1 Myr) Orion Trapezium theta1 Ori cluster members. The
inner ~41x53" of the cluster was imaged at spatial resolutions of ~0.050" (at
1.64 microns). A combination of high spatial resolution and high S/N yielded
relative binary positions to ~0.5 mas accuracies. Including previous speckle
data, we analyse a 15 year baseline of high-resolution observations of this
cluster. We are now sensitive to relative proper motions of just ~0.3 mas/yr
(0.6 km/s at 450 pc) this is a ~7x improvement in orbital velocity accuracy
compared to previous efforts. We now detect clear orbital motions in the theta1
Ori B2/B3 system of 4.9+/-0.3 km/s and 7.2+/-0.8 km/s in the theta1 Ori A1/A2
system (with correlations of PA vs. time at >99% confidence). All five members
of the theta1 Ori B system appear likely as a gravitationally bound
"mini-cluster". The very lowest mass member of the theta1 Ori B system (B4;
mass ~0.2 Msun) has, for the first time, a clearly detected motion (at
4.3+/-2.0 km/s; correlation=99.7%) w.r.t B1. However, B4 is most likely in an
long-term unstable (non-hierarchical) orbit and may "soon" be ejected from this
"mini-cluster". This "ejection" process could play a major role in the
formation of low mass stars and brown dwarfs.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication by the Astrophysical
Journa
The First Hundred Brown Dwarfs Discovered by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
We present ground-based spectroscopic verification of six Y dwarfs (see
Cushing et al), eighty-nine T dwarfs, eight L dwarfs, and one M dwarf
identified by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). Eighty of these
are cold brown dwarfs with spectral types greater than or equal to T6, six of
which have been announced earlier in Mainzer et al and Burgasser et al. We
present color-color and color-type diagrams showing the locus of M, L, T, and Y
dwarfs in WISE color space. Near-infrared classifications as late as early Y
are presented and objects with peculiar spectra are discussed. After deriving
an absolute WISE 4.6 um (W2) magnitude vs. spectral type relation, we estimate
spectrophotometric distances to our discoveries. We also use available
astrometric measurements to provide preliminary trigonometric parallaxes to
four our discoveries, which have types of L9 pec (red), T8, T9, and Y0; all of
these lie within 10 pc of the Sun. The Y0 dwarf, WISE 1541-2250, is the closest
at 2.8 (+1.3,-0.6) pc; if this 2.8 pc value persists after continued
monitoring, WISE 1541-2250 will become the seventh closest stellar system to
the Sun. Another ten objects, with types between T6 and >Y0, have
spectrophotometric distance estimates also placing them within 10 pc. The
closest of these, the T6 dwarf WISE 1506+7027, is believed to fall at a
distance of roughly 4.9 pc. WISE multi-epoch positions supplemented with
positional info primarily from Spitzer/IRAC allow us to calculate proper
motions and tangential velocities for roughly one half of the new discoveries.
This work represents the first step by WISE to complete a full-sky,
volume-limited census of late-T and Y dwarfs. Using early results from this
census, we present preliminary, lower limits to the space density of these
objects and discuss constraints on both the functional form of the mass
function and the low-mass limit of star formation.Comment: 147 pages with 62 figures; submitted May 30 and accepted August 22
for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Serie
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