88 research outputs found
Constraints on Extrasolar Planet Populations from VLT NACO/SDI and MMT SDI and Direct Adaptive Optics Imaging Surveys: Giant Planets are Rare at Large Separations
We examine the implications for the distribution of extrasolar planets based
on the null results from two of the largest direct imaging surveys published to
date. Combining the measured contrast curves from 22 of the stars observed with
the VLT NACO adaptive optics system by Masciadri et al. (2005), and 48 of the
stars observed with the VLT NACO SDI and MMT SDI devices by Biller et al.
(2007) (for a total of 60 unique stars; the median star for our survey is a 30
Myr K2 star at 25 pc), we consider what distributions of planet masses and
semi-major axes can be ruled out by these data, based on Monte Carlo
simulations of planet populations. We can set this upper limit with 95%
confidence: the fraction of stars with planets with semi-major axis from 20 to
100 AU, and mass >4 M_Jup, is 20% or less. Also, with a distribution of planet
mass of dN/dM ~ M^-1.16 between 0.5-13 M_Jup, we can rule out a power-law
distribution for semi-major axis (dN/da ~ a^alpha) with index 0 and upper
cut-off of 18 AU, and index -0.5 with an upper cut-off of 48 AU. For the
distribution suggested by Cumming et al. (2007), a power-law of index -0.61, we
can place an upper limit of 75 AU on the semi-major axis distribution. At the
68% confidence level, these upper limits state that fewer than 8% of stars have
a planet of mass >4 M_Jup between 20 and 100 AU, and a power-law distribution
for semi-major axis with index 0, -0.5, and -0.61 cannot have giant planets
beyond 12, 23, and 29 AU, respectively. In general, we find that even null
results from direct imaging surveys are very powerful in constraining the
distributions of giant planets (0.5-13 M_Jup) at large separations, but more
work needs to be done to close the gap between planets that can be detected by
direct imaging, and those to which the radial velocity method is sensitive.Comment: 46 pages, 17 figures, accepted to Ap
Where Are The M Dwarf Disks Older Than 10 Million Years?
We present 11.7-micron observations of nine late-type dwarfs obtained at the
Keck I 10-meter telescope in December 2002 and April 2003. Our targets were
selected for their youth or apparent IRAS 12-micron excess. For all nine
sources, excess infrared emission is not detected. We find that stellar wind
drag can dominate the circumstellar grain removal and plausibly explain the
dearth of M Dwarf systems older than 10 Myr with currently detected infrared
excesses. We predict M dwarfs possess fractional infrared excess on the order
of L_{IR}/L_{*}\sim10^{-6} and this may be detectable with future efforts.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, accepted to Ap
Nearby stars from the LSPM-north Proper Motion Catalog. I. Main Sequence Dwarfs and Giants Within 33 Parsecs of the Sun
A list of 4,131 dwarfs, subgiants, and giants located, or suspected to be
located, within 33 parsecs of the Sun is presented. All the stars are drawn
from the new LSPM-north catalog of 61,976 stars with annual proper motions
larger than 0.15''/yr$. Trigonometric parallax measurements are found in the
literature for 1,676 of the stars in the sample; photometric and spectroscopic
distance moduli are found for another 783 objects. The remaining 1,672 objects
are reported here as nearby star candidates for the first time. Photometric
distance moduli are calculated for the new stars based on the (M_V,V-J)
relationship, calibrated with the subsample of stars which have trigonometric
parallaxes. The list of new candidates includes 539 stars which are suspected
to be within 25 parsecs of the Sun, including 63 stars estimated to be within
only 15 parsecs. The current completeness of the census of nearby stars in the
northern sky is discussed in light of the new candidates presented here. It is
estimated that 32% (18%) of nuclear burning stars within 33 parsecs (25
parsecs) of the Sun remain to be located. The missing systems are expected to
have proper motions below the 0.15''/yr limit of the LSPM catalog.Comment: 13 pages, accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa
Meeting the Cool Neighbours, II: Photometry of southern NLTT stars
We present BVRI photometry of 180 bright, southern nearby-star candidates.
The stars were selected from the New Luyten Two-Tenths proper motion catalogue
based on optical/infrared colours, constructed by combining Luytens's m(r)
estimates with near-infrared photometry from the 2-Micron All Sky Survey.
Photometric parallaxes derived from (V-K), (V-I) and (I-J) colours, combined
with the limited available astrometry, show that as many as 108 stars may lie
within 20 parsecs of the Sun. Of these, 53 are new to nearby star catalogues,
including three within 10 parsecs of the Sun.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, to be published in The Astronomical Journal.
More information can be found at http://www.stsci.edu/~inr/nstars.htm
Rubidium in Metal-Deficient Disk and Halo Stars
We report the first extensive study of stellar Rb abundances. High-resolution
spectra have been used to determine, or set upper limits on, the abundances of
this heavy element and the associated elements Y, Zr, and Ba in 44 dwarfs and
giants with metallicities spanning the range -2.0 <[Fe/H] < 0.0. In
metal-deficient stars Rb is systematically overabundant relative to Fe; we find
an average [Rb/Fe] of +0.21 for the 32 stars with [Fe/H] < -0.5 and measured
Rb. This behavior contrasts with that of Y, Zr, and Ba, which, with the
exception of three new CH stars (HD 23439A and B and BD +5 3640), are
consistently slightly deficient relative to Fe in the same stars; excluding the
three CH stars, we find the stars with [Fe/H] < -0.5 have average [Y/Fe],
[Zr/Fe], and [Ba/Fe] of --0.19 (24 stars), --0.12 (28 stars), and --0.06 (29
stars), respectively. The different behavior of Rb on the one hand and Y, Zr,
and Ba on the other can be attributed in part to the fact that in the Sun and
in these stars Rb has a large r-process component while Y, Zr, and Ba are
mostly s-process elements with only small r-process components. In addition,
the Rb s-process abundance is dependent on the neutron density at the
s-processing site. Published observations of Rb in s-process enriched red
giants indicate a higher neutron density in the metal-poor giants. These
observations imply a higher s-process abundance for Rb in metal-poor stars. The
calculated combination of the Rb r-process abundance, as estimated for the
stellar Eu abundances, and the s-process abundance as estimated for red giants
accounts satisfactorily for the observed run of [Rb/Fe] with [Fe/H].Comment: 23 pages, 5 tables, 7 figure
The Solar Neighborhood XVII: Parallax Results from the CTIOPI 0.9m Program -- Twenty New Members of the RECONS 10 Parsec Sample
Astrometric measurements for 25 red dwarf systems are presented, including
the first definitive trigonometric parallaxes for 20 systems within 10 pc of
the Sun, the horizon of the RECONS sample. The three nearest systems that had
no previous trigonometric parallaxes (other than perhaps rough preliminary
efforts) are SO 0253+1652 (3.84 +/- 0.04 pc, the 23rd nearest system), SCR
1845-6357 AB (3.85 +/- 0.02 pc, 24th), and LHS 1723 (5.32 +/- 0.04 pc, 56th).
In total, seven of the systems reported here rank among the nearest 100 stellar
systems. Supporting photometric and spectroscopic observations have been made
to provide full characterization of the systems, including complete VRIJHK
photometry and spectral types. A study of the variability of 27 targets reveals
six obvious variable stars, including GJ 1207, for which we observed a flare
event in the V band that caused it to brighten by 1.7 mag.
Improved parallaxes for GJ 54 AB and GJ 1061, both important members of the
10 pc sample, are also reported. Definitive parallaxes for GJ 1001 A, GJ 633,
and GJ 2130 ABC, all of which have been reported to be within 10 pc, indicate
that they are beyond 10 pc. From the analysis of systems with (previously) high
trigonometric parallax errors, we conclude that parallaxes with errors in
excess of 10 mas are insufficiently reliable for inclusion in the RECONS
sample. The cumulative total of new additions to the 10 pc sample since 2000 is
now 34 systems -- 28 by the RECONS team and six by other groups. This total
represents a net increase of 16% in the number of stellar systems reliably
known to be nearer than 10 pc.Comment: 33 pages, including 3 figures and 3 table
From the Top to the Bottom of the Main Sequence: A Complete Mass Function of the Young Open Cluster M35
We present very deep and accurate photometry of the open cluster M35 (VRIc
filters). We have covered a region of 27.5x27.5 square arcmin.
The data range from Ic=12.5 to 23.5 mag, and the color intervals are
0.4\le(V-I)c\le3.0, 0.5\le(R-I)c\le2.5. Roughly, these values span from 1.6
M_\odot down to the substellar limit. By using the location of the stars on
color-magnitude and color-color diagrams, we have selected candidate members of
this cluster. We have merged our sample with previously published data and
obtained a color-magnitude diagram for the complete stellar population of the
cluster, covering the spectral range early B - mid M. The Mass Function
increases monotonically, when plotted in a log-log form, until it reaches ~0.8
M_\odot (\alpha=2.59). It remains shallower for less massive stars (\alpha=0.81
for 0.8-0.2 M_\odot), whereas a decrease ins observed for stars close to the
substellar regime. The total mass of the cluster is ~1600 M_\odot in the area
covered by this study.Comment: Accepted ApJ (Jan 10, 2001 issue
The Density of Coronal Plasma in Active Stellar Coronae
We have analyzed high-resolution X-ray spectra of a sample of 22 active stars
observed with the High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer on {\em
Chandra} in order to investigate their coronal plasma density. Densities where
investigated using the lines of the He-like ions O VII, Mg XI, and Si XIII.
While Si XIII lines in all stars of the sample are compatible with the
low-density limit, Mg XI lines betray the presence of high plasma densities ( cm) for most of the sources with higher X-ray luminosity ( erg/s); stars with higher and tend to have higher
densities at high temperatures. Ratios of O VII lines yield much lower
densities of a few cm, indicating that the ``hot'' and
``cool'' plasma resides in physically different structures. Our findings imply
remarkably compact coronal structures, especially for the hotter plasma
emitting the Mg XI lines characterized by coronal surface filling factor,
, ranging from to , while we find
values from a few up to for the cooler plasma emitting the O
VII lines. We find that approaches unity at the same stellar surface
X-ray flux level as solar active regions, suggesting that these stars become
completely covered by active regions. At the same surface flux level,
is seen to increase more sharply with increasing surface flux. These
results appear to support earlier suggestions that hot K plasma in
active coronae arises from flaring activity, and that this flaring activity
increases markedly once the stellar surface becomes covered with active
regions.Comment: 53 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal. A version of the paper with higher quality figures is available from
http://www.astropa.unipa.it/Library/preprint.htm
GJ 900: A new hierarchical system with low-mass components
Speckle interferometric observations made with the 6 m telescope of the
Special Astrophysical Observatory of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 2000
revealed the triple nature of the nearby ( mas)
low-mass young ( Myr) star GJ 900. The configuration of the triple
system allowed it to be dynamically unstable. Differential photometry performed
from 2000 through 2004 yielded - and -band absolute magnitudes and
spectral types for the components to be =6.660.08,
=9.150.11, =10.080.26, =4.840.08,
=6.760.20, =7.390.31, K5--K7,
M3--M4, M5--M6. The ``mass--luminosity''
relation is used to estimate the individual masses of the components:
,
,
. From the observations of the
components relative motion in the period 2000--2006, we conclude that GJ 900 is
a hierarchical triple star with the possible orbital periods
P80 yrs and P20 yrs. An analysis of the 2MASS
images of the region around GJ 900 leads us to suggest that the system can
include other very-low-mass components.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Stellar Activity in Coeval Open Clusters: Praesepe and The Hyades
Randich and Schmitt [1995, A&A 298, 115] found that the coronal activity of
solar-type and low mass stars in Praesepe is significantly lower than that of
stars in the Hyades cluster. We have carried out several tests in order to find
a possible explanation for this result. We have measured radial velocities of
two groups of Praesepe stars (a dF-dK sample and a dM sample) and have measured
H as a chromospheric activity index for the dM sample. We conclude that
the Praesepe catalog used in the X-ray analysis does not contain a significant
number of non-members. The comparison of the H equivalent widths for
the M dwarfs in Praesepe with those in the Hyades indicates that, at least for
stars in this mass range, the Praesepe stars are as active or more active than
their Hyades counterparts. We have also analyzed a few ROSAT PSPC pointings of
Praesepe in order to obtain a new and independent estimate of the X-ray
luminosities and upper limits for a small sample of Praesepe members concluding
that the small differences between the old and new upper limits are not large
enough to explain the dichotomy in the X-ray properties of Praesepe and the
Hyades. Therefore, our examination of the available data does not provide a
clear reason to explain why the X-ray luminosity functions of the two clusters
are different. Part of the explanation could be found in the binaries.
Speculatively, these clusters could have different orbital period
distributions, with more short period binaries among the Hyades, which would
show larger coronal activity.Comment: Accepted for publiction in Ap
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