34 research outputs found
Observing Strategies for the NICI Campaign to Directly Image Extrasolar Planets
We discuss observing strategy for the Near Infrared Coronagraphic Imager
(NICI) on the 8-m Gemini South telescope. NICI combines a number of techniques
to attenuate starlight and suppress superspeckles: 1) coronagraphic imaging, 2)
dual channel imaging for Spectral Differential Imaging (SDI) and 3) operation
in a fixed Cassegrain rotator mode for Angular Differential Imaging (ADI). NICI
will be used both in service mode and for a dedicated 50 night planet search
campaign. While all of these techniques have been used individually in large
planet-finding surveys, this is the first time ADI and SDI will be used with a
coronagraph in a large survey. Thus, novel observing strategies are necessary
to conduct a viable planet search campaign.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Proceedings of the SPI
The Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign: The Offset Ring of HR 4796 A
We present J, H, CH_4 short (1.578 micron), CH_4 long (1.652 micron) and
K_s-band images of the dust ring around the 10 Myr old star HR 4796 A obtained
using the Near Infrared Coronagraphic Imager (NICI) on the Gemini-South 8.1
meter Telescope. Our images clearly show for the first time the position of the
star relative to its circumstellar ring thanks to NICI's translucent focal
plane occulting mask. We employ a Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo method to
constrain the offset vector between the two. The resulting probability
distribution shows that the ring center is offset from the star by 16.7+/-1.3
milliarcseconds along a position angle of 26+/-3 degrees, along the PA of the
ring, 26.47+/-0.04 degrees. We find that the size of this offset is not large
enough to explain the brightness asymmetry of the ring. The ring is measured to
have mostly red reflectivity across the JHK_s filters, which seems to indicate
micron-sized grains. Just like Neptune's 3:2 and 2:1 mean-motion resonances
delineate the inner and outer edges of the classical Kuiper Belt, we find that
the radial extent of the HR 4796 A and Fomalhaut rings could correspond to the
3:2 and 2:1 mean-motion resonances of hypothetical planets at 54.7 AU and 97.7
AU in the two systems, respectively. A planet orbiting HR 4796 A at 54.7 AU
would have to be less massive than 1.6 Mjup so as not to widen the ring too
much by stirring.Comment: Accepted to A&A for publication on April 23, 2014 (15 pages, 9
figures, 4 tables
The Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign: The Frequency of Giant Planets Around Debris Disk Stars
We have completed a high-contrast direct imaging survey for giant planets
around 57 debris disk stars as part of the Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign.
We achieved median H-band contrasts of 12.4 mag at 0.5" and 14.1 mag at 1"
separation. Follow-up observations of the 66 candidates with projected
separation < 500 AU show that all of them are background objects. To establish
statistical constraints on the underlying giant planet population based on our
imaging data, we have developed a new Bayesian formalism that incorporates (1)
non-detections, (2) single-epoch candidates, (3) astrometric and (4)
photometric information, and (5) the possibility of multiple planets per star
to constrain the planet population. Our formalism allows us to include in our
analysis the previously known Beta Pictoris and the HR 8799 planets. Our
results show at 95% confidence that 5MJup
planet beyond 80 AU, and 3MJup planet outside
of 40 AU, based on hot-start evolutionary models. We model the population of
directly-imaged planets as d^2N/dMda ~ m^alpha a^beta, where m is planet mass
and a is orbital semi-major axis (with a maximum value of amax). We find that
beta 1.7. Likewise, we find that beta < -0.8 and/or amax
< 200 AU. If we ignore the Beta Pic and HR 8799 planets (should they belong to
a rare and distinct group), we find that
3MJup planet beyond 10 AU, and beta < -0.8 and/or alpha < -1.5. Our Bayesian
constraints are not strong enough to reveal any dependence of the planet
frequency on stellar host mass. Studies of transition disks have suggested that
about 20% of stars are undergoing planet formation; our non-detections at large
separations show that planets with orbital separation > 40 AU and planet masses
> 3 MJup do not carve the central holes in these disks.Comment: Accepted to ApJ on June 24, 2013. 67 pages, 17 figures, 12 table
Book reviews
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/45645/1/11199_2004_Article_BF00287975.pd
The Cascadia Initiative : a sea change In seismological studies of subduction zones
Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of The Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 27, no. 2 (2014): 138-150, doi:10.5670/oceanog.2014.49.Increasing public awareness that the Cascadia subduction zone in the Pacific Northwest is capable of great earthquakes (magnitude 9 and greater) motivates the Cascadia Initiative, an ambitious onshore/offshore seismic and geodetic experiment that takes advantage of an amphibious array to study questions ranging from megathrust earthquakes, to volcanic arc structure, to the formation, deformation and hydration of the Juan De Fuca and Gorda Plates. Here, we provide an overview of the Cascadia Initiative, including its primary science objectives, its experimental design and implementation, and a preview of how the resulting data are being used by a diverse and growing scientific community. The Cascadia Initiative also exemplifies how new technology and community-based experiments are opening up frontiers for marine science. The new technology—shielded ocean bottom seismometers—is allowing more routine investigation of the source zone of megathrust earthquakes, which almost exclusively lies offshore and in shallow water. The Cascadia Initiative offers opportunities and accompanying challenges to a rapidly expanding community of those who use ocean bottom seismic data.The Cascadia Initiative is supported by
the National Science Foundation; the
CIET is supported under grants OCE-
1139701, OCE-1238023, OCE‐1342503,
OCE-1407821, and OCE-1427663
to the University of Oregon
Astrometric Calibration of the Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign
We describe the astrometric calibration of the Gemini NICI Planet-Finding
Campaign. The Campaign requires a relative astrometric accuracy of 20
mas across multi-year timescales in order to distinguish true companions from
background stars by verifying common proper motion and parallax with their
parent stars. The calibration consists of a correction for instrumental optical
image distortion, plus on-sky imaging of astrometric fields to determine the
pixel scale and image orientation. We achieve an accuracy of mas
between the center and edge of the 18 NICI field, meeting the 20 mas
requirement. Most of the Campaign data in the Gemini Science Archive are
accurate to this level but we identify a number of anomalies and present
methods to correct the errors.Comment: 4 figures. Accepted for publication in PAS