138 research outputs found
Kepler Planet Detection Metrics: Automatic Detection of Background Objects Using the Centroid Robovetter
We present an automated method of identifying background eclipsing binaries masquerading as planet candidates in the Kepler planet candidate catalogs. We codify the manual vetting process for Kepler Objects of Interest (KOIs) described in Bryson et al. (2013) with a series of measurements and tests that can be performed algorithmically. We compare our automated results with a sample of manually vetted KOIs from the catalog of Burke et al. (2014) and find excellent agreement. We test the performance on a set of simulated transits and find our algorithm correctly identifies simulated false positives approximately 50 of the time, and correctly identifies 99 of simulated planet candidates
The Pseudosynchronization of Binary Stars Undergoing Strong Tidal Interactions
Eccentric binaries known as heartbeat stars experience strong dynamical tides
as the stars pass through periastron, providing a laboratory to study tidal
interactions. We measure the rotation periods of 24 heartbeat systems, using
the Kepler light curves to identify rotation peaks in the Fourier transform.
Where possible, we compare the rotation period to the pseudosynchronization
period derived by Hut 1981. Few of our heartbeat stars are pseudosynchronized
with the orbital period. For four systems, we were able to identify two sets of
rotation peaks, which we interpret as the rotation from both stars in the
binary. The majority of the systems have a rotation period that is
approximately 3/2 times the pseudosynchronization period predicted by Hut 1981,
suggesting that other physical mechanisms influence the stars' rotation, or
that stars typically reach tidal spin equilibrium at a rotation period slightly
longer than predicted.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
A New Timescale for Period Change in the Pulsating DA White Dwarf WD 0111+0018
We report the most rapid rate of period change measured to date for a
pulsating DA (hydrogen atmosphere) white dwarf (WD), observed in the 292.9 s
mode of WD 0111+0018. The observed period change, faster than 10^{-12} s/s,
exceeds by more than two orders of magnitude the expected rate from cooling
alone for this class of slow and simply evolving pulsating WDs. This result
indicates the presence of an additional timescale for period evolution in these
pulsating objects. We also measure the rates of period change of nonlinear
combination frequencies and show that they share the evolutionary
characteristics of their parent modes, confirming that these combination
frequencies are not independent modes but rather artifacts of some nonlinear
distortion in the outer layers of the star.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Spitzer Planet Limits around the Pulsating White Dwarf GD66
We present infrared observations in search of a planet around the white
dwarf, GD66. Time-series photometry of GD66 shows a variation in the arrival
time of stellar pulsations consistent with the presence of a planet with mass >
2.4Mj. Any such planet is too close to the star to be resolved, but the
planet's light can be directly detected as an excess flux at 4.5um. We observed
GD66 with the two shorter wavelength channels of IRAC on Spitzer but did not
find strong evidence of a companion, placing an upper limit of 5--7Mj on the
mass of the companion, assuming an age of 1.2--1.7Gyr.Comment: 10 pages, accepted by Ap
The Dust Cloud around the White Dwarf G 29-38. II. Spectrum from 5 to 40 μm and Mid-Infrared Photometric Variability
We model the mineralogy and distribution of dust around the white dwarf G29-39 using the infrared spectrum from 1 to 35 μm. The spectral model for G29-38 dust combines a wide range of materials based on spectral studies of comets and debris disks. In order of their contribution to the mid-infrared emission, the most abundant minerals around G29-38 are amorphous carbon (λ < 8 μm), amorphous and crystalline silicates (5-40 μm), water ice (10-15 and 23-35 μm), and metal sulfides (18-28 μm). The amorphous C can be equivalently replaced by other materials (like metallic Fe) with featureless infrared spectra. The best-fitting crystalline silicate is Fe-rich pyroxene. In order to absorb enough starlight to power the observed emission, the disk must either be much thinner than the stellar radius (so that it can be heated from above and below) or it must have an opening angle wider than 2°. A "moderately optically thick" torus model fits well if the dust extends inward to 50 times the white dwarf radius, all grains hotter than 1100 K are vaporized, the optical depth from the star through the disk is τ║ = 5, and the radial density profile α r ^(–2.7); the total mass of this model disk is 2 × 10^(19) g. A physically thin (less than the white dwarf radius) and optically thick disk can contribute to the near-infrared continuum only; such a disk cannot explain the longer-wavelength continuum or strong emission features. The combination of a physically thin, optically thick inner disk and an outer, physically thick and moderately optically thin cloud or disk produces a reasonably good fit to the spectrum and requires only silicates in the outer cloud. We discuss the mineralogical results in comparison to planetary materials. The silicate composition contains minerals found from cometary spectra and meteorites, but Fe-rich pyroxene is more abundant than enstatite (Mg-rich pyroxene) or forsterite (Mg-rich olivine) in G29-38 dust, in contrast to what is found in most comet or meteorite mineralogies. Enstatite meteorites may be the most similar solar system materials to G29-38 dust. Finally, we suggest the surviving core of a "hot Jupiter" as an alternative (neither cometary nor asteroidal) origin for the debris, though further theoretical work is needed to determine if this hypothesis is viable
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Limits On Planets Around Pulsating White Dwarf Stars
We present limits on planetary companions to pulsating white dwarf stars. A subset of these stars exhibit extreme stability in the period and phase of some of their pulsation modes; a planet can be detected around such a star by searching for periodic variations in the arrival time of these pulsations. We present limits on companions greater than a few Jupiter masses around a sample of 15 white dwarf stars as part of an ongoing survey. One star shows a variation in arrival time consistent with a 2M(J) planet in a 4.5 yr orbit. We discuss other possible explanations for the observed signal and conclude that a planet is the most plausible explanation based on the data available.NASA Origins NAG5-13094Astronom
The New Class of Dusty DAZ White Dwarfs
Our mid-infrared survey of 124 white dwarfs with the Spitzer Space Telescope
and the IRAC imager has revealed an infrared excess associated with the white
dwarf WD 2115-560 naturally explained by circumstellar dust. This object is the
fourth white dwarf observed to have circumstellar dust. All four are DAZ white
dwarfs, i.e. they have both photospheric Balmer lines and photospheric metal
lines.
We discuss these four objects as a class, which we abbreviate "DAZd", where
the "d" stands for "dust". Using an optically-thick, geometrically-thin disk
model analogous to Saturn's rings, we find that the inner disk edges are at
>~0.1 to 0.2 Ro and that the outer disk edges are ~0.3 to 0.6 Ro. This model
naturally explains the accretion rates and lifetimes of the detected WD disks
and the accretion rates inferred from photospheric metal abundances.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, ApJ accepte
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