5,664 research outputs found
Space Shuttle Main Engine radio frequency emissions
Several approaches to develop a diagnostics system for monitoring the operational health of the Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME) are being evaluated. The ultimate goal is providing protection for the SSME as well as improving ground and flight test techniques. One scenario with some potential is measuring radio frequency (RF) emissions (if present) in the exhaust plume and correlating the data to engine health. An RF emissions detection system was therefore designed, the equipment leased, and the components integrated and checked out to conduct a quick-look investigation of RF emissions in the SSME exhaust plume. The system was installed on the A-1 Test Stand at Stennis Space Center, MS, and data were successfully acquired during SSME firings from May 3 to September 15, 1988. The experiments indicated that emitted radiation in the RF (20 to 470 MHz) spectrum definitely exists in the SSME exhaust plume, and is of such magnitude that it can be distinguished during the firing from background noise. Although additional efforts are necessary to assess the merit of this approach as a health monitoring technique, the potential is significant, and additional studies are recommended
Near-Infrared Properties of Metal-poor Globular Clusters in the Galactic Bulge Direction
Aims. J, H, and K' images obtained from the near-infrared imager CFHTIR on
the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope are used to derive the morphological
parameters of the red giant branch (RGB) in the near-infrared color-magnitude
diagrams for 12 metal-poor globular clusters in the Galactic bulge direction.
Using the compiled data set of the RGB parameters for the observed 12 clusters,
in addition to the previously studied 5 clusters, we discuss the properties of
the RGB morphology for the clusters and compare them with the calibration
relations for the metal-rich bulge clusters and the metal-poor halo clusters.
Methods. The photometric RGB shape indices such as colors at fixed magnitudes
of MK = MH = (-5.5, -5, -4, and -3), magnitudes at fixed colors of (J - K)o =
(J - H)o = 0.7, and the RGB slope are measured from the fiducial normal points
defined in the near- infrared color-magnitude diagrams for each cluster. The
magnitudes of RGB bump and tip are also estimated from the differential and
cumulative luminosity functions of the selected RGB stars. The derived RGB
parameters have been used to examine the overall behaviors of the RGB
morphology as a function of cluster metallicity. Results. The correlations
between the near-infrared photometric RGB shape indices and the cluster
metallicity for the programme clusters compare favorably with the previous
observational calibration relations for metal-rich clusters in the Galactic
bulge and the metal-poor halo clusters. The observed near-infrared magnitudes
of the RGB bump and tip for the investigated clusters are also in accordance
with the previous calibration relations for the Galactic bulge clusters.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The NASA-UC Eta-Earth Program: III. A Super-Earth orbiting HD 97658 and a Neptune-mass planet orbiting Gl 785
We report the discovery of planets orbiting two bright, nearby early K dwarf
stars, HD 97658 and Gl 785. These planets were detected by Keplerian modelling
of radial velocities measured with Keck-HIRES for the NASA-UC Eta-Earth Survey.
HD 97658 b is a close-in super-Earth with minimum mass Msini = 8.2 +/- 1.2
M_Earth, orbital period P = 9.494 +/- 0.005 d, and an orbit that is consistent
with circular. Gl 785 b is a Neptune-mass planet with Msini = 21.6 +/- 2.0
M_Earth, P = 74.39 +/- 0.12 d, and orbital eccentricity 0.30 +/- 0.09.
Photometric observations with the T12 0.8 m automatic photometric telescope at
Fairborn Observatory show that HD 97658 is photometrically constant at the
radial velocity period to 0.09 mmag, supporting the existence of the planet.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 7 pages, 6 figures, 5 table
The NASA-UC Eta-Earth Program: II. A Planet Orbiting HD 156668 with a Minimum Mass of Four Earth Masses
We report the discovery of HD 156668b, an extrasolar planet with a minimum
mass of M_P sin i = 4.15 M_Earth. This planet was discovered through Keplerian
modeling of precise radial velocities from Keck-HIRES and is the second
super-Earth to emerge from the NASA-UC Eta-Earth Survey. The best-fit orbit is
consistent with circular and has a period of P = 4.6455 d. The Doppler
semi-amplitude of this planet, K = 1.89 m/s, is among the lowest ever detected,
on par with the detection of GJ 581e using HARPS. A longer period (P ~ 2.3 yr),
low-amplitude signal of unknown origin was also detected in the radial
velocities and was filtered out of the data while fitting the short-period
planet. Additional data are required to determine if the long-period signal is
due to a second planet, stellar activity, or another source. Photometric
observations using the Automated Photometric Telescopes at Fairborn Observatory
show that HD 156668 (an old, quiet K3 dwarf) is photometrically constant over
the radial velocity period to 0.1 mmag, supporting the existence of the planet.
No transits were detected down to a photometric limit of ~3 mmag, ruling out
transiting planets dominated by extremely bloated atmospheres, but not
precluding a transiting solid/liquid planet with a modest atmosphere.Comment: This planet was announced at the 2010 AAS meeting in Wash. DC; 12
pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Ap
Five planets and an independent confirmation of HD 196885Ab from Lick Observatory
We present time series Doppler data from Lick Observatory that reveal the
presence of long-period planetary companions orbiting nearby stars. The typical
eccentricity of these massive planets are greater than the mean eccentricity of
known exoplanets. HD30562b has Msini = 1.29 Mjup, with semi-major axis of 2.3
AU and eccentricity 0.76. The host star has a spectral type F8V and is metal
rich. HD86264b has Msini = 7.0 Mjup, arel = 2.86 AU, an eccentricity, e = 0.7
and orbits a metal-rich, F7V star. HD87883b has Msini = 1.78 Mjup, arel = 3.6
AU, e = 0.53 and orbits a metal-rich K0V star. HD89307b has Msini = 1.78 Mjup,
arel = 3.3 AU, e = 0.24 and orbits a G0V star with slightly subsolar
metallicity. HD148427b has Msini = 0.96 Mjup, arel = 0.93 AU, eccentricity of
0.16 and orbits a metal rich K0 subgiant. We also present velocities for a
planet orbiting the F8V metal-rich binary star, HD196885A. The planet has Msini
= 2.58 Mjup, arel = 2.37 AU, and orbital eccentricity of 0.48, in agreement
with the independent discovery by Correia et al. 2008.Comment: 12 figures, 8 tables, accepted Ap
Two Exoplanets Discovered at Keck Observatory
We present two exoplanets detected at Keck Observatory. HD 179079 is a G5
subgiant that hosts a hot Neptune planet with Msini = 27.5 M_earth in a 14.48
d, low-eccentricity orbit. The stellar reflex velocity induced by this planet
has a semiamplitude of K = 6.6 m/s. HD 73534 is a G5 subgiant with a
Jupiter-like planet of Msini = 1.1 M_jup and K = 16 m/s in a nearly circular
4.85 yr orbit. Both stars are chromospherically inactive and metal-rich. We
discuss a known, classical bias in measuring eccentricities for orbits with
velocity semiamplitudes, K, comparable to the radial velocity uncertainties.
For exoplanets with periods longer than 10 days, the observed exoplanet
eccentricity distribution is nearly flat for large amplitude systems (K > 80
m/s), but rises linearly toward low eccentricity for lower amplitude systems (K
> 20 m/s).Comment: 8 figures, 6 tables, accepted, Ap
The NASA-UC Eta-Earth Program: I. A Super-Earth Orbiting HD 7924
We report the discovery of the first low-mass planet to emerge from the
NASA-UC Eta-Earth Program, a super-Earth orbiting the K0 dwarf HD 7924.
Keplerian modeling of precise Doppler radial velocities reveals a planet with
minimum mass M_P sin i = 9.26 M_Earth in a P = 5.398 d orbit. Based on
Keck-HIRES measurements from 2001 to 2008, the planet is robustly detected with
an estimated false alarm probability of less than 0.001. Photometric
observations using the Automated Photometric Telescopes at Fairborn Observatory
show that HD 7924 is photometrically constant over the radial velocity period
to 0.19 mmag, supporting the existence of the planetary companion. No transits
were detected down to a photometric limit of ~0.5 mmag, eliminating transiting
planets with a variety of compositions. HD 7924b is one of only eight planets
known with M_P sin i < 10 M_Earth and as such is a member of an emerging family
of low-mass planets that together constrain theories of planet formation.Comment: ApJ accepted, 10 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
The discovery of the electromagnetic counterpart of GW170817: kilonova AT 2017gfo/DLT17ck
During the second observing run of the Laser Interferometer gravitational-
wave Observatory (LIGO) and Virgo Interferometer, a gravitational-wave signal
consistent with a binary neutron star coalescence was detected on 2017 August
17th (GW170817), quickly followed by a coincident short gamma-ray burst trigger
by the Fermi satellite. The Distance Less Than 40 (DLT40) Mpc supernova search
performed pointed follow-up observations of a sample of galaxies regularly
monitored by the survey which fell within the combined LIGO+Virgo localization
region, and the larger Fermi gamma ray burst error box. Here we report the
discovery of a new optical transient (DLT17ck, also known as SSS17a; it has
also been registered as AT 2017gfo) spatially and temporally coincident with
GW170817. The photometric and spectroscopic evolution of DLT17ck are unique,
with an absolute peak magnitude of Mr = -15.8 \pm 0.1 and an r-band decline
rate of 1.1mag/d. This fast evolution is generically consistent with kilonova
models, which have been predicted as the optical counterpart to binary neutron
star coalescences. Analysis of archival DLT40 data do not show any sign of
transient activity at the location of DLT17ck down to r~19 mag in the time
period between 8 months and 21 days prior to GW170817. This discovery
represents the beginning of a new era for multi-messenger astronomy opening a
new path to study and understand binary neutron star coalescences, short
gamma-ray bursts and their optical counterparts.Comment: ApJL in press, 4 figure
Evidence for an unconventional magnetic instability in the spin-tetrahedra system Cu_2Te_2O_5Br_2
Thermodynamic experiments as well as Raman scattering have been used to study
the magnetic instabilities in the spin-tetrahedra systems Cu_2Te_2O_5X_2, X=Cl
and Br. While the phase transition observed in the Cl system at T_o=18.2 K is
consistent with 3D AF ordering, the phase transition at T_o=11.3 K in the Br
system has several unusual features. We propose an explanation in terms of
weakly coupled tetrahedra with a singlet-triplet gap and low lying singlets.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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