490 research outputs found
Spitzer Observations of OGLE-2015-BLG-1212 Reveal a New Path toward Breaking Strong Microlens Degeneracies
Spitzer microlensing parallax observations of OGLE-2015-BLG-1212 decisively break a degeneracy between planetary and binary solutions that is somewhat ambiguous when only ground-based data are considered. Only eight viable models survive out of an initial set of 32 local minima in the parameter space. These models clearly indicate that the lens is a stellar binary system possibly located within the bulge of our Galaxy, ruling out the planetary alternative. We argue that several types of discrete degeneracies can be broken via such space-based parallax observations
Simultaneous follow-up of planetary transits: revised physical properties for the planetary systems HAT-P-16 and WASP-21
Context. By now more than 300 planets transiting their host star have been
found, and much effort is being put into measuring the properties of each
system. Light curves of planetary transits often contain deviations from a
simple transit shape, and it is generally difficult to differentiate between
anomalies of astrophysical nature (e.g. starspots) and correlated noise due to
instrumental or atmospheric effects. Our solution is to observe transit events
simultaneously with two telescopes located at different observatories. Aims.
Using this observational strategy, we look for anomalies in the light curves of
two transiting planetary systems and accurately estimate their physical
parameters. Methods. We present the first photometric follow-up of the
transiting planet HAT-P-16 b, and new photometric observations of WASP-21 b,
obtained simultaneously with two medium-class telescopes located in different
countries, using the telescope defocussing technique. We modeled these and
other published data in order to estimate the physical parameters of the two
planetary systems. Results. The simultaneous observations did not highlight
particular features in the light curves, which is consistent with the low
activity levels of the two stars. For HAT-P-16, we calculated a new ephemeris
and found that the planet is 1.3 \sigma colder and smaller (Rb = 1.190 \pm
0.037 RJup) than the initial estimates, suggesting the presence of a massive
core. Our physical parameters for this system point towards a younger age than
previously thought. The results obtained for WASP-21 reveal lower values for
the mass and the density of the planet (by 1.0 \sigma and 1.4 \sigma
respectively) with respect to those found in the discovery paper, in agreement
with a subsequent study. We found no evidence of any transit timing variations
in either system.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Treatment of a double-giant Rhinophyma with electrocautery and Versajet hydrosurgery system
Rhinophyma is a disfiguring condition etiologically related to rosacea and due to hypertrophy of the sebaceous glands of the nose. It leads to a progressive thickening of the skin up to the development, in some cases, of severe deformities that result in significant functional deficits and serious cosmetic damage. We report a case of giant rhinophyma consisting of 2 large masses that interfered with feeding and respiration of the patient, and we describe the surgical treatment by resection with electrosurgery and razor-thin saline jet (Versajet Hydrosurgery System). This combined approach is simple and effective for the treatment of severe cases of rhinophyma
First test of an enriched CdWO scintillating bolometer for neutrinoless double-beta-decay searches
For the first time, a cadmium tungstate crystal scintillator enriched in
Cd has been succesfully tested as a scintillating bolometer. The
measurement was performed above ground at a temperature of 18 mK. The crystal
mass was 34.5 g and the enrichment level ~82 %. Despite a substantial pile-up
effect due to above-ground operation, the detector demonstrated a high energy
resolution (2-7 keV FWHM in 0.2-2.6 MeV energy range), a powerful
particle identification capability and a high level of internal radiopurity.
These results prove that cadmium tungstate is an extremely promising detector
material for a next-generation neutrinoless double-beta decay bolometric
experiment, like that proposed in the CUPID project (CUORE Upgrade with
Particle IDentification)
ExELS: an exoplanet legacy science proposal for the ESA Euclid mission. II. Hot exoplanets and sub-stellar systems
The Exoplanet Euclid Legacy Survey (ExELS) proposes to determine the
frequency of cold exoplanets down to Earth mass from host separations of ~1 AU
out to the free-floating regime by detecting microlensing events in Galactic
Bulge. We show that ExELS can also detect large numbers of hot, transiting
exoplanets in the same population. The combined microlensing+transit survey
would allow the first self-consistent estimate of the relative frequencies of
hot and cold sub-stellar companions, reducing biases in comparing "near-field"
radial velocity and transiting exoplanets with "far-field" microlensing
exoplanets. The age of the Bulge and its spread in metallicity further allows
ExELS to better constrain both the variation of companion frequency with
metallicity and statistically explore the strength of star-planet tides.
We conservatively estimate that ExELS will detect ~4100 sub-stellar objects,
with sensitivity typically reaching down to Neptune-mass planets. Of these,
~600 will be detectable in both Euclid's VIS (optical) channel and NISP H-band
imager, with ~90% of detections being hot Jupiters. Likely scenarios predict a
range of 2900-7000 for VIS and 400-1600 for H-band. Twice as many can be
expected in VIS if the cadence can be increased to match the 20-minute H-band
cadence. The separation of planets from brown dwarfs via Doppler boosting or
ellipsoidal variability will be possible in a handful of cases. Radial velocity
confirmation should be possible in some cases, using 30-metre-class telescopes.
We expect secondary eclipses, and reflection and emission from planets to be
detectable in up to ~100 systems in both VIS and NISP-H. Transits of ~500
planetary-radius companions will be characterised with two-colour photometry
and ~40 with four-colour photometry (VIS,YJH), and the albedo of (and emission
from) a large sample of hot Jupiters in the H-band can be explored
statistically.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, accepted MNRA
ExELS: an exoplanet legacy science proposal for the ESA Euclid mission. II. Hot exoplanets and sub-stellar systems
The Exoplanet Euclid Legacy Survey (ExELS) proposes to determine the
frequency of cold exoplanets down to Earth mass from host separations of ~1 AU
out to the free-floating regime by detecting microlensing events in Galactic
Bulge. We show that ExELS can also detect large numbers of hot, transiting
exoplanets in the same population. The combined microlensing+transit survey
would allow the first self-consistent estimate of the relative frequencies of
hot and cold sub-stellar companions, reducing biases in comparing "near-field"
radial velocity and transiting exoplanets with "far-field" microlensing
exoplanets. The age of the Bulge and its spread in metallicity further allows
ExELS to better constrain both the variation of companion frequency with
metallicity and statistically explore the strength of star-planet tides.
We conservatively estimate that ExELS will detect ~4100 sub-stellar objects,
with sensitivity typically reaching down to Neptune-mass planets. Of these,
~600 will be detectable in both Euclid's VIS (optical) channel and NISP H-band
imager, with ~90% of detections being hot Jupiters. Likely scenarios predict a
range of 2900-7000 for VIS and 400-1600 for H-band. Twice as many can be
expected in VIS if the cadence can be increased to match the 20-minute H-band
cadence. The separation of planets from brown dwarfs via Doppler boosting or
ellipsoidal variability will be possible in a handful of cases. Radial velocity
confirmation should be possible in some cases, using 30-metre-class telescopes.
We expect secondary eclipses, and reflection and emission from planets to be
detectable in up to ~100 systems in both VIS and NISP-H. Transits of ~500
planetary-radius companions will be characterised with two-colour photometry
and ~40 with four-colour photometry (VIS,YJH), and the albedo of (and emission
from) a large sample of hot Jupiters in the H-band can be explored
statistically.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, accepted MNRA
Inferring statistics of planet populations by means of automated microlensing searches
(abridged) The study of other worlds is key to understanding our own, and not
only provides clues to the origin of our civilization, but also looks into its
future. Rather than in identifying nearby systems and learning about their
individual properties, the main value of the technique of gravitational
microlensing is in obtaining the statistics of planetary populations within the
Milky Way and beyond. Only the complementarity of different techniques
currently employed promises to yield a complete picture of planet formation
that has sufficient predictive power to let us understand how habitable worlds
like ours evolve, and how abundant such systems are in the Universe. A
cooperative three-step strategy of survey, follow-up, and anomaly monitoring of
microlensing targets, realized by means of an automated expert system and a
network of ground-based telescopes is ready right now to be used to obtain a
first census of cool planets with masses reaching even below that of Earth
orbiting K and M dwarfs in two distinct stellar populations, namely the
Galactic bulge and disk. The hunt for extra-solar planets acts as a principal
science driver for time-domain astronomy with robotic-telescope networks
adopting fully-automated strategies. Several initiatives, both into facilities
as well as into advanced software and strategies, are supposed to see the
capabilities of gravitational microlensing programmes step-wise increasing over
the next 10 years. New opportunities will show up with high-precision
astrometry becoming available and studying the abundance of planets around
stars in neighbouring galaxies becoming possible. Finally, we should not miss
out on sharing the vision with the general public, and make its realization to
profit not only the scientists but all the wider society.Comment: 10 pages in PDF format. White paper submitted to ESA's Exo-Planet
Roadmap Advisory Team (EPR-AT); typos corrected. The embedded figures are
available from the author on request. See also "Towards A Census of
Earth-mass Exo-planets with Gravitational Microlensing" by J.P. Beaulieu, E.
Kerins, S. Mao et al. (arXiv:0808.0005
M31 Pixel Lensing PLAN Campaign: MACHO Lensing and Self Lensing Signals
We present the final analysis of the observational campaign carried out by
the PLAN (Pixel Lensing Andromeda) collaboration to detect a dark matter signal
in form of MACHOs through the microlensing effect. The campaign consists of
about 1 month/year observations carried out during 4 years (2007-2010) at the
1.5m Cassini telescope in Loiano ("Astronomical Observatory of BOLOGNA", OAB)
plus 10 days of data taken in 2010 at the 2m Himalayan Chandra Telescope (HCT)
monitoring the central part of M31 (two fields of about 13'x12.6'). We
establish a fully automated pipeline for the search and the characterization of
microlensing flux variations: as a result we detect 3 microlensing candidates.
We evaluate the expected signal through a full Monte Carlo simulation of the
experiment completed by an analysis of the detection efficiency of our
pipeline. We consider both "self lensing" and "MACHO lensing" lens populations,
given by M31 stars and dark matter halo MACHOs, in the M31 and the Milky Way
(MW), respectively. The total number of events is compatible with the expected
self-lensing rate. Specifically, we evaluate an expected signal of about 2
self-lensing events. As for MACHO lensing, for full 0.5 (0.01) solar mass MACHO
halos, our prediction is for about 4 (7) events. The comparatively small number
of expected MACHO versus self lensing events, together with the small number
statistics at disposal, do not enable us to put strong constraints on that
population. Rather, the hypothesis, suggested by a previous analysis, on the
MACHO nature of OAB-07-N2, one of the microlensing candidates, translates into
a sizeable lower limit for the halo mass fraction in form of the would be MACHO
population, f, of about 15% for 0.5 solar mass MACHOs.Comment: ApJ accepted, 13 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Slott-Agape Project
SLOTT-AGAPE (Systematic Lensing Observation at Toppo Telescope - Andromeda
Gravitational Amplification Pixel Lensing Experiment) is a new collaboration
project among international partners from England, France, Germany, Italy and
Switzerland that intends to perform microlensing observation by using M31 as
target. The MACHOs search is made thanks to the pixel lensing technique.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, proceeding of XLIII Congresso della Societa'
Astronomica Italiana, Napoli, 4-8 Maggio, 199
Gravitomagnetic corrections to the lensing deflection angle for spiral galaxy models
We investigate the effects of the gravitomagnetic corrections to the usual
gravitational lens quantities for a specific lensing mass distribution modelled
after spiral galaxies. An exponential disk is embedded into two different
spherical halo models where disk and haloes parameters are fixed according to
the observed mass to light ratios, galaxy magnitudes and rotation curves. The
general expressions for the lensing deflection angle are given also taking into
account the orientation of the galaxy disk plane with respect to the lens
plane. It is found that the gravitomagnetic term changes the deflection angle
by a typical amount of the order of ten microarcseconds.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication on MNRA
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