2,702 research outputs found
A refined analysis of the low-mass eclipsing binary system T-Cyg1-12664
The observational mass-radius relation of main sequence stars with masses
between ~0.3 and 1.0 Msun reveals deviations between the stellar radii
predicted by models and the observed radii of stars in detached binaries. We
generate an accurate physical model of the low-mass eclipsing binary
T-Cyg1-12664 in the Kepler mission field to measure the physical parameters of
its components and to compare them with the prediction of theoretical stellar
evolution models. We analyze the Kepler mission light curve of T-Cyg1-12664 to
accurately measure the times and phases of the primary and secondary eclipse.
In addition, we measure the rotational period of the primary component by
analyzing the out-of-eclipse oscillations that are due to spots. We accurately
constrain the effective temperature of the system using ground-based absolute
photometry in B, V, Rc, and Ic. We also obtain and analyze V, Rc, Ic
differential light curves to measure the eccentricity and the orbital
inclination of the system, and a precise Teff ratio. From the joint analysis of
new radial velocities and those in the literature we measure the individual
masses of the stars. Finally, we use the PHOEBE code to generate a physical
model of the system. T-Cyg1-12664 is a low eccentricity system, located
d=360+/-22 pc away from us, with an orbital period of P=4.1287955(4) days, and
an orbital inclination i=86.969+/-0.056 degrees. It is composed of two very
different stars with an active G6 primary with Teff1=5560+/-160 K,
M1=0.680+/-0.045 Msun, R1=0.799+/-0.017 Rsun, and a M3V secondary star with
Teff2=3460+/-210 K, M2=0.376+/-0.017 Msun, and R2=0.3475+/-0.0081 Rsun. The
primary star is an oversized and spotted active star, hotter than the stars in
its mass range. The secondary is a cool star near the mass boundary for fully
convective stars (M~0.35 Msun), whose parameters appear to be in agreement with
low-mass stellar model.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, 15 table
Classifying the unknown: discovering novel gravitational-wave detector glitches using similarity learning
The observation of gravitational waves from compact binary coalescences by
LIGO and Virgo has begun a new era in astronomy. A critical challenge in making
detections is determining whether loud transient features in the data are
caused by gravitational waves or by instrumental or environmental sources. The
citizen-science project \emph{Gravity Spy} has been demonstrated as an
efficient infrastructure for classifying known types of noise transients
(glitches) through a combination of data analysis performed by both citizen
volunteers and machine learning. We present the next iteration of this project,
using similarity indices to empower citizen scientists to create large data
sets of unknown transients, which can then be used to facilitate supervised
machine-learning characterization. This new evolution aims to alleviate a
persistent challenge that plagues both citizen-science and instrumental
detector work: the ability to build large samples of relatively rare events.
Using two families of transient noise that appeared unexpectedly during LIGO's
second observing run (O2), we demonstrate the impact that the similarity
indices could have had on finding these new glitch types in the Gravity Spy
program
Transit Timing Observations of the Extrasolar Hot-Neptune Planet GL 436b
Gliese 436 is an M dwarf with a mass of 0.45 Msun and hosts the extrasolar
planet GL 436b [3, 6, 7, 2], which is currently the least massive transiting
planet with a mass of ~23.17 Mearth [10], and the only planet known to transit
an M dwarf. GL 436b represents the first transiting detection of the class of
extrasolar planets known as "Hot Neptunes" that have masses within a few times
that of Neptune's mass (~17 Mearth) and orbital semimajor axis <0.1 AU about
the host star. Unlike most other known transiting extrasolar planets, GL 436b
has a high eccentricity (e~0.16). This brings to light a new parameter space
for habitability zones of extrasolar planets with host star masses much smaller
than typical stars of roughly a solar mass. This unique system is an ideal
candidate for orbital perturbation and transit-time variation (TTV) studies to
detect smaller, possibly Earth-mass planets in the system. In April 2008 we
began a long-term intensive campaign to obtain complete high-precision light
curves using the Apache Point Observatory's 3.5-meter telescope, NMSU's 1-meter
telescope (located at APO), and Sommers Bausch Observatory's 24" telescope.
These light curves are being analyzed together, along with amateur and other
professional astronomer observations. Results of our analysis are discussed.
Continued measurements over the next few years are needed to determine if
additional planets reside in the system, and to study the impact of other
manifestations on the light curves, such as star spots and active regions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in "Proceedings of the 15th Cambridge
Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems and the Sun", 2009, AIP Conference
Proceedings vol. 1094, ed. Eric Stempel
Composite Reflective/Absorptive IR-Blocking Filters Embedded in Metamaterial Antireflection Coated Silicon
Infrared (IR) blocking filters are crucial for controlling the radiative
loading on cryogenic systems and for optimizing the sensitivity of bolometric
detectors in the far-IR. We present a new IR filter approach based on a
combination of patterned frequency selective structures on silicon and a thin
(50 thick) absorptive composite based on powdered reststrahlen
absorbing materials. For a 300 K blackbody, this combination reflects
50\% of the incoming light and blocks \textgreater 99.8\% of the total
power with negligible thermal gradients and excellent low frequency
transmission. This allows for a reduction in the IR thermal loading to
negligible levels in a single cold filter. These composite filters are
fabricated on silicon substrates which provide excellent thermal transport
laterally through the filter and ensure that the entire area of the absorptive
filter stays near the bath temperature. A metamaterial antireflection coating
cut into these substrates reduces in-band reflections to below 1\%, and the
in-band absorption of the powder mix is below 1\% for signal bands below 750
GHz. This type of filter can be directly incorporated into silicon refractive
optical elements
Supplement: Going the Distance: Mapping Host Galaxies of LIGO and Virgo Sources in Three Dimensions Using Local Cosmography and Targeted Follow-up
This is a supplement to the Letter of Singer et al.
(https://arxiv.org/abs/1603.07333), in which we demonstrated a rapid algorithm
for obtaining joint 3D estimates of sky location and luminosity distance from
observations of binary neutron star mergers with Advanced LIGO and Virgo. We
argued that combining the reconstructed volumes with positions and redshifts of
possible host galaxies can provide large-aperture but small field of view
instruments with a manageable list of targets to search for optical or infrared
emission. In this Supplement, we document the new HEALPix-based file format for
3D localizations of gravitational-wave transients. We include Python sample
code to show the reader how to perform simple manipulations of the 3D sky maps
and extract ranked lists of likely host galaxies. Finally, we include
mathematical details of the rapid volume reconstruction algorithm.Comment: For associated data release, see
http://asd.gsfc.nasa.gov/Leo.Singer/going-the-distanc
Measuring Transit Signal Recovery in the Kepler Pipeline. III. Completeness of the Q1-Q17 DR24 Planet Candidate Catalogue, with Important Caveats for Occurrence Rate Calculations
With each new version of the Kepler pipeline and resulting planet candidate
catalogue, an updated measurement of the underlying planet population can only
be recovered with an corresponding measurement of the Kepler pipeline detection
efficiency. Here, we present measurements of the sensitivity of the pipeline
(version 9.2) used to generate the Q1-Q17 DR24 planet candidate catalog
(Coughlin et al. 2016). We measure this by injecting simulated transiting
planets into the pixel-level data of 159,013 targets across the entire Kepler
focal plane, and examining the recovery rate. Unlike previous versions of the
Kepler pipeline, we find a strong period dependence in the measured detection
efficiency, with longer (>40 day) periods having a significantly lower
detectability than shorter periods, introduced in part by an incorrectly
implemented veto. Consequently, the sensitivity of the 9.2 pipeline cannot be
cast as a simple one-dimensional function of the signal strength of the
candidate planet signal as was possible for previous versions of the pipeline.
We report on the implications for occurrence rate calculations based on the
Q1-Q17 DR24 planet candidate catalog and offer important caveats and
recommendations for performing such calculations. As before, we make available
the entire table of injected planet parameters and whether they were recovered
by the pipeline, enabling readers to derive the pipeline detection sensitivity
in the planet and/or stellar parameter space of their choice.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, full electronic version of Table 1 available at
the NASA Exoplanet Archive; accepted by ApJ May 2nd, 201
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