1,934 research outputs found
Predicting Stellar Angular Sizes
Reliable prediction of stellar diameters, particularly angular diameters, is
a useful and necessary tool for the increasing number of milliarcsecond
resolution studies being carried out in the astronomical community. A new and
accurate technique of predicting angular sizes is presented for main sequence
stars, giant and supergiant stars, and for more evolved sources such as carbon
stars and Mira variables. This technique uses observed and either or
broad-band photometry to predict V=0 or B=0 zero magnitude angular sizes,
which are then readily scaled to the apparent angular sizes with the or
photometry. The spread in the relationship is 2.2% for main sequence stars; for
giant and supergiant stars, 11-12%; and for evolved sources, results are at the
20-26% level. Compared to other simple predictions of angular size, such as
linear radius-distance methods or black-body estimates, zero magnitude angular
size predictions can provide apparent angular sizes with errors that are 2 to 5
times smaller.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures, accepted by PAS
Directly Determined Linear Radii and Effective Temperatures of Exoplanet Host Stars
We present interferometric angular sizes for 12 stars with known planetary
companions, for comparison with 28 additional main-sequence stars not known to
host planets. For all objects we estimate bolometric fluxes and reddenings
through spectral energy distribution fits, and in conjunction with the angular
sizes, measurements of effective temperature. The angular sizes of these stars
are sufficiently small that the fundamental resolution limits of our primary
instrument, the Palomar Testbed Interferometer, are investigated at the
sub-milliarcsecond level and empirically established based upon known
performance limits. We demonstrate that the effective temperature scale as a
function of dereddened color is statistically identical for stars
with and without planets. A useful byproduct of this investigation is a direct
calibration of the scale for solar-like stars, as a function of
both spectral type and color, with an precision of K over the range and K for the range F6V -- G5V. Additionally, we provide in
an appendix spectral energy distribution fits for the 166 stars with known
planets which have sufficient photometry available in the literature for such
fits; this derived "{\tt XO-Rad}" database includes homogenous estimates of
bolometric flux, reddening, and angular size.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
The PTI Carbon Star Angular Size Survey: Effective Temperatures and Non-Sphericity
We report new interferometric angular diameter observations of 41 carbon
stars observed with the Palomar Testbed Interferometer (PTI). Two of these
stars are CH carbon stars and represent the first such measurements for this
subtype. Of these, 39 have Yamashita (1972,1975) spectral classes and are of
sufficiently high quality that we may determine the dependence of effective
temperature on spectral type. We find that there is a tendency for the
effective temperature to increase with increasing temperature index by ~120K
per step, starting at T_EFF ~= 2500K for C3,y, although there is a large amount
of scatter about this relationship. Overall, the median effective temperature
for the carbon star sample is found to be 2800 +- 270K, and the median linear
radius is 360 +- 100 R_SUN. We also find agreement on average within 15K with
the T_EFF determinations of Bergeat (2001,2002a,b), and a refinement of carbon
star angular size prediction based on V & K magnitudes is presented that is
good to an rms of 12%. A subsample of our stars have sufficient {u,v} coverage
to permit non-spherical modeling of their photospheres, and a general tendency
for detection of statistically significant departures from sphericity with
increasing signal-to-noise of the interferometric data is seen. The
implications of most - and potentially all - carbon stars being non-spherical
is considered in the context of surface inhomogeneities and a rotation-mass
loss connection.Comment: 59 pages, 15 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
Dynamical mass of the O-type supergiant in Zeta Orionis A
A close companion of Zeta Orionis A was found in 2000 with the Navy Precision
Optical Interferometer (NPOI), and shown to be a physical companion. Because
the primary is a supergiant of type O, for which dynamical mass measurements
are very rare, the companion was observed with NPOI over the full 7-year orbit.
Our aim was to determine the dynamical mass of a supergiant that, due to the
physical separation of more than 10 AU between the components, cannot have
undergone mass exchange with the companion. The interferometric observations
allow measuring the relative positions of the binary components and their
relative brightness. The data collected over the full orbital period allows all
seven orbital elements to be determined. In addition to the interferometric
observations, we analyzed archival spectra obtained at the Calar Alto, Haute
Provence, Cerro Armazones, and La Silla observatories, as well as new spectra
obtained at the VLT on Cerro Paranal. In the high-resolution spectra we
identified a few lines that can be associated exclusively to one or the other
component for the measurement of the radial velocities of both. The combination
of astrometry and spectroscopy then yields the stellar masses and the distance
to the binary star. The resulting masses for components Aa of 14.0 solar masses
and Ab of 7.4 solar masses are low compared to theoretical expectations, with a
distance of 294 pc which is smaller than a photometric distance estimate of 387
pc based on the spectral type B0III of the B component. If the latter (because
it is also consistent with the distance to the Orion OB1 association) is
adopted, the mass of the secondary component Ab of 14 solar masses would agree
with classifying a star of type B0.5IV. It is fainter than the primary by about
2.2 magnitudes in the visual. The primary mass is then determined to be 33
solar masses
Establishing Visible Interferometer System Responses: Resolved and Unresolved Calibrators
The propagation of errors through the uniform disk visibility function is
examined. Implications of those errors upon measures of absolute visibility
through optical and near-infrared interferometers are considered within the
context of using calibration stars to establish system visibilities for these
instruments. We suggest a simple ratio test to establish empirically whether or
not the measured visibilities produced by such an instrument are relative
(errors dominated by calibrator angular size prediction error) or absolute
(errors dominated by measurement error).Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, to be published in the PAS
The Spitzer 24μm Photometric Light Curve of the Eclipsing M-dwarf Binary GU Boötis
We present a carefully controlled set of Spitzer 24 μm MIPS time series observations of the low mass eclipsing binary star GU Boötis (GU Boo). Our data cover three secondary eclipses of the system: two consecutive events and an additional eclipse six weeks later. The study’s main purpose is the long wavelength characterization of GU Boo’s light curve, independent of limb darkening and less sensitive to surface features such as spots. Its analysis allows for independent verification of the results of optical studies of GU Boo. Our mid-infrared results show good agreement with previously obtained system parameters. In addition, the analysis of light curves of other objects in the field of view serves to characterize the photometric stability and repeatability of Spitzer’s MIPS-24 at flux densities between approximately 300–2,000μJy. We find that the light curve root mean square about the median level falls into the 1–4% range for flux densities higher than 1 mJy
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