8,083 research outputs found
Assessment of geophysical flows for zero-gravity simulation
The results of research relating to the feasibility of using a low gravity environment to model geophysical flows are presented. Atmospheric and solid earth flows are considered. Possible experiments and their required apparatus are suggested
Line-profile tomography of exoplanet transits I: The Doppler shadow of HD 189733b
We present a direct method for isolating the component of the starlight
blocked by a planet as it transits its host star, and apply it to spectra of
the bright transiting planet HD 189733b. We model the global shape of the
stellar cross-correlation function as the convolution of a limb-darkened
rotation profile and a gaussian representing the Doppler core of the average
photospheric line profile. The light blocked by the planet during the transit
is a gaussian of the same intrinsic width, whose trajectory across the line
profile yields a precise measure of the misalignment angle and an independent
measure of v sin I. We show that even when v sin I is less than the width of
the intrinsic line profile, the travelling Doppler "shadow" cast by the planet
creates an identifiable distortion in the line profiles which is amenable to
direct modelling. Direct measurement of the trajectory of the missing starlight
yields self-consistent measures of the projected stellar rotation rate, the
intrinsic width of the mean local photospheric line profile, the projected
spin-orbit misalignment angle, and the system's centre-of-mass velocity.
Combined with the photometric rotation period, the results give a geometrical
measure of the stellar radius which agrees closely with values obtained from
high-precision transit photometry if a small amount of differential rotation is
present in the stellar photosphere.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables; accepted by MNRA
A Prograde, Low-Inclination Orbit for the Very Hot Jupiter WASP-3b
We present new spectroscopic and photometric observations of the transiting
exoplanetary system WASP-3. Spectra obtained during two separate transits
exhibit the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect and allow us to estimate the
sky-projected angle between the planetary orbital axis and the stellar rotation
axis, lambda = 3.3^{+2.5}_{-4.4} degrees. This alignment between the axes
suggests that WASP-3b has a low orbital inclination relative to the equatorial
plane of its parent star. During our first night of spectroscopic measurements,
we observed an unexpected redshift briefly exceeding the expected sum of the
orbital and RM velocities by 140 m/s. This anomaly could represent the
occultation of material erupting from the stellar photosphere, although it is
more likely to be an artifact caused by moonlight scattered into the
spectrograph.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal, Replacement includes revised citation
A High Stellar Obliquity in the WASP-7 Exoplanetary System
We measure a tilt of 86+-6 deg between the sky projections of the rotation
axis of the WASP-7 star, and the orbital axis of its close-in giant planet.
This measurement is based on observations of the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM)
effect with the Planet Finder Spectrograph on the Magellan II telescope. The
result conforms with the previously noted pattern among hot-Jupiter hosts,
namely, that the hosts lacking thick convective envelopes have high
obliquities. Because the planet's trajectory crosses a wide range of stellar
latitudes, observations of the RM effect can in principle reveal the stellar
differential rotation profile; however, with the present data the signal of
differential rotation could not be detected. The host star is found to exhibit
radial-velocity noise (``stellar jitter') with an amplitude of ~30m/s over a
timescale of days.Comment: ApJ accepted, 9 pages, 9 figure
The spin-orbit angle of the transiting hot jupiter CoRoT-1b
We measure the angle between the planetary orbit and the stellar rotation
axis in the transiting planetary system CoRoT-1, with new HIRES/Keck and
FORS/VLT high-accuracy photometry. The data indicate a highly tilted system,
with a projected spin-orbit angle lambda = 77 +- 11 degrees. Systematic
uncertainties in the radial velocity data could cause the actual errors to be
larger by an unknown amount, and this result needs to be confirmed with further
high-accuracy spectroscopic transit measurements.
Spin-orbit alignment has now been measured in a dozen extra-solar planetary
systems, and several show strong misalignment. The first three misaligned
planets were all much more massive than Jupiter and followed eccentric orbits.
CoRoT-1, however, is a jovian-mass close-in planet on a circular orbit. If its
strong misalignment is confirmed, it would break this pattern. The high
occurence of misaligned systems for several types of planets and orbits favours
planet-planet scattering as a mechanism to bring gas giants on very close
orbits.Comment: to appear in in MNRAS letters [5 pages
Obliquities of Hot Jupiter host stars: Evidence for tidal interactions and primordial misalignments
We provide evidence that the obliquities of stars with close-in giant planets
were initially nearly random, and that the low obliquities that are often
observed are a consequence of star-planet tidal interactions. The evidence is
based on 14 new measurements of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect (for the systems
HAT-P-6, HAT-P-7, HAT-P-16, HAT-P-24, HAT-P-32, HAT-P-34, WASP-12, WASP-16,
WASP-18, WASP-19, WASP-26, WASP-31, Gl 436, and Kepler-8), as well as a
critical review of previous observations. The low-obliquity (well-aligned)
systems are those for which the expected tidal timescale is short, and likewise
the high-obliquity (misaligned and retrograde) systems are those for which the
expected timescale is long. At face value, this finding indicates that the
origin of hot Jupiters involves dynamical interactions like planet-planet
interactions or the Kozai effect that tilt their orbits, rather than
inspiraling due to interaction with a protoplanetary disk. We discuss the
status of this hypothesis and the observations that are needed for a more
definitive conclusion.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; typos corrected, 2 broken references
fixed, 26 pages, 25 figure
HATS-1b: The First Transiting Planet Discovered by the HATSouth Survey
We report the discovery of HATS-1b, a transiting extrasolar planet orbiting
the moderately bright V=12.05 G dwarf star GSC 6652-00186, and the first planet
discovered by HATSouth, a global network of autonomous wide-field telescopes.
HATS-1b has a period P~3.4465 d, mass Mp~1.86MJ, and radius Rp~1.30RJ. The host
star has a mass of 0.99Msun, and radius of 1.04Rsun. The discovery light curve
of HATS-1b has near continuous coverage over several multi-day periods,
demonstrating the power of using a global network of telescopes to discover
transiting planets.Comment: Submitted to AJ 10 pages, 5 figures, 6 table
Interferometric Phase Calibration Sources in the Declination Range 0deg to -30deg
We present a catalog of 321 compact radio sources in the declination range
0deg > delta > -30deg. The positions of these sources have been measured with a
two-dimensional rms accuracy of 35 milliarcseconds using the NRAO Very Large
Array. Each source has a peak flux density >50 mJy at 8.4 GHz. We intend for
this catalog to be used mainly for selection of phase calibration sources for
radio interferometers, although compact radio sources have other scientific
uses.Comment: 9 pages. To appear in ApJS. Catalog (Table 3) is abbreviated in
printed version. Complete catalog available at
ftp://ftp.aoc.nrao.edu/pub/staff/jwrobel/WPW2003_ApJS.tx
Selective Principal Component Extraction and Reconstruction: A Novel Method for Ground Based Exoplanet Spectroscopy
Context: Infrared spectroscopy of primary and secondary eclipse events probes
the composition of exoplanet atmospheres and, using space telescopes, has
detected H2O, CH4 and CO2 in three hot Jupiters. However, the available data
from space telescopes has limited spectral resolution and does not cover the
2.4 - 5.2 micron spectral region. While large ground based telescopes have the
potential to obtain molecular-abundance-grade spectra for many exoplanets,
realizing this potential requires retrieving the astrophysical signal in the
presence of large Earth-atmospheric and instrument systematic errors. Aims:
Here we report a wavelet-assisted, selective principal component extraction
method for ground based retrieval of the dayside spectrum of HD 189733b from
data containing systematic errors. Methods: The method uses singular value
decomposition and extracts those critical points of the Rayleigh quotient which
correspond to the planet induced signal. The method does not require prior
knowledge of the planet spectrum or the physical mechanisms causing systematic
errors. Results: The spectrum obtained with our method is in excellent
agreement with space based measurements made with HST and Spitzer (Swain et al.
2009b; Charbonneau et al. 2008) and confirms the recent ground based
measurements (Swain et al. 2010) including the strong 3.3 micron emission.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; excepted for publication by A&
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