650 research outputs found
Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy of Uranus from the Spitzer Infrared Spectrometer: 2. Determination of the Mean Composition of the Upper Troposphere and Stratosphere
Mid-infrared spectral observations Uranus acquired with the Infrared
Spectrometer (IRS) on the Spitzer Space Telescope are used to determine the
abundances of C2H2, C2H6, CH3C2H, C4H2, CO2, and tentatively CH3 on Uranus at
the time of the 2007 equinox. For vertically uniform eddy diffusion
coefficients in the range 2200-2600 cm2 s-1, photochemical models that
reproduce the observed methane emission also predict C2H6 profiles that compare
well with emission in the 11.6-12.5 micron wavelength region, where the nu9
band of C2H6 is prominent. Our nominal model with a uniform eddy diffusion
coefficient Kzz = 2430 cm2 sec-1 and a CH4 tropopause mole fraction of 1.6x10-5
provides a good fit to other hydrocarbon emission features, such as those of
C2H2 and C4H2, but the model profile for CH3C2H must be scaled by a factor of
0.43, suggesting that improvements are needed in the chemical reaction
mechanism for C3Hx species. The nominal model is consistent with a CH3D/CH4
ratio of 3.0+-0.2x10-4. From the best-fit scaling of these photochemical-model
profiles, we derive column abundances above the 10-mbar level of 4.5+01.1/-0.8
x 10+19 molecule-cm-2 for CH4, 6.2 +- 1.0 x 10+16 molecule-cm-2 for C2H2 (with
a value 24% higher from a different longitudinal sampling), 3.1 +- 0.3 x 10+16
molecule-cm-2 for C2H6, 8.6 +- 2.6 x 10+13 molecule-cm-2 for CH3C2H, 1.8 +- 0.3
x 10+13 molecule-cm-2 for C4H2, and 1.7 +- 0.4 x 10+13 molecule-cm-2 for CO2 on
Uranus. Our results have implications with respect to the influx rate of
exogenic oxygen species and the production rate of stratospheric hazes on
Uranus, as well as the C4H2 vapor pressure over C4H2 ice at low temperatures
Inferring statistics of planet populations by means of automated microlensing searches
(abridged) The study of other worlds is key to understanding our own, and not
only provides clues to the origin of our civilization, but also looks into its
future. Rather than in identifying nearby systems and learning about their
individual properties, the main value of the technique of gravitational
microlensing is in obtaining the statistics of planetary populations within the
Milky Way and beyond. Only the complementarity of different techniques
currently employed promises to yield a complete picture of planet formation
that has sufficient predictive power to let us understand how habitable worlds
like ours evolve, and how abundant such systems are in the Universe. A
cooperative three-step strategy of survey, follow-up, and anomaly monitoring of
microlensing targets, realized by means of an automated expert system and a
network of ground-based telescopes is ready right now to be used to obtain a
first census of cool planets with masses reaching even below that of Earth
orbiting K and M dwarfs in two distinct stellar populations, namely the
Galactic bulge and disk. The hunt for extra-solar planets acts as a principal
science driver for time-domain astronomy with robotic-telescope networks
adopting fully-automated strategies. Several initiatives, both into facilities
as well as into advanced software and strategies, are supposed to see the
capabilities of gravitational microlensing programmes step-wise increasing over
the next 10 years. New opportunities will show up with high-precision
astrometry becoming available and studying the abundance of planets around
stars in neighbouring galaxies becoming possible. Finally, we should not miss
out on sharing the vision with the general public, and make its realization to
profit not only the scientists but all the wider society.Comment: 10 pages in PDF format. White paper submitted to ESA's Exo-Planet
Roadmap Advisory Team (EPR-AT); typos corrected. The embedded figures are
available from the author on request. See also "Towards A Census of
Earth-mass Exo-planets with Gravitational Microlensing" by J.P. Beaulieu, E.
Kerins, S. Mao et al. (arXiv:0808.0005
Discovery of Highly Obscured Galaxies in the Zone of Avoidance
We report the discovery of twenty-five previously unknown galaxies in the
Zone of Avoidance. Our systematic search for extended extra-galactic sources in
the GLIMPSE and MIPSGAL mid-infrared surveys of the Galactic plane has revealed
two overdensities of these sources, located around l ~ 47 and 55 degrees and
|b| less than 1 degree in the Sagitta-Aquila region. These overdensities are
consistent with the local large-scale structure found at similar Galactic
longitude and extending from |b| ~ 4 to 40 degrees. We show that the infrared
spectral energy distribution of these sources is indeed consistent with those
of normal galaxies. Photometric estimates of their redshift indicate that the
majority of these galaxies are found in the redshift range z = 0.01 - 0.05,
with one source located at z = 0.07. Comparison with known sources in the local
Universe reveals that these galaxies are located at similar overdensities in
redshift space. These new galaxies are the first evidence of a bridge linking
the large-scale structure between both sides of the Galactic plane at very low
Galactic latitude and clearly demonstrate the feasibility of detecting galaxies
in the Zone of Avoidance using mid-to-far infrared surveys.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, 28 pages, 5
tables, 11 figure
Microlens OGLE-2005-BLG-169 Implies Cool Neptune-Like Planets are Common
We detect a Neptune mass-ratio (q~8e-5) planetary companion to the lens star
in the extremely high-magnification (A~800) microlensing event
OGLE-2005-BLG-169. If the parent is a main-sequence star, it has mass M~0.5
M_sun implying a planet mass of ~13 M_earth and projected separation of ~2.7
AU. When intensely monitored over their peak, high-magnification events similar
to OGLE-2005-BLG-169 have nearly complete sensitivity to Neptune mass-ratio
planets with projected separations of 0.6 to 1.6 Einstein radii, corresponding
to 1.6--4.3 AU in the present case. Only two other such events were monitored
well enough to detect Neptunes, and so this detection by itself suggests that
Neptune mass-ratio planets are common. Moreover, another Neptune was recently
discovered at a similar distance from its parent star in a low-magnification
event, which are more common but are individually much less sensitive to
planets. Combining the two detections yields 90% upper and lower frequency
limits f=0.37^{+0.30}_{-0.21} over just 0.4 decades of planet-star separation.
In particular, f>16% at 90% confidence. The parent star hosts no Jupiter-mass
companions with projected separations within a factor 5 of that of the detected
planet. The lens-source relative proper motion is \mu~7--10 mas/yr, implying
that if the lens is sufficiently bright, I<23.8, it will be detectable by HST
by 3 years after peak. This would permit a more precise estimate of the lens
mass and distance, and so the mass and projected separation of the planet.
Analogs of OGLE-2005-BLG-169Lb orbiting nearby stars would be difficult to
detect by other methods of planet detection, including radial velocities,
transits, or astrometry.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters, 9 text pages + 4 figures + 1 tabl
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Thermal H<sub>2</sub>O emission from the Herbig-Haro flow HH 54
The first detection of thermal water emission from a Herbig-Haro object is presented. The observations were performed with the LWS (Long Wavelength Spectrograph) aboard ISO (Infrared Space Observatory). Besides H2O, rotational lines of CO are present in the spectrum of HH 54. These high-J CO lines are used to derive the physical model parameters of the FIR (far-infrared) molecular line emitting regions. This model fits simultaneously the observed OH and H2O spectra for an OH abundance X(OH)=10-6 and a water vapour abundance X(H2O)=10-5.
At a distance of 250pc, the total CO, OH and H2O rotational line cooling rate is estimated to be 1.3x10-2 L⊙, which is comparable to the mechanical luminosity generated by the 10km s-1 shocks, suggesting that practically all of the cooling of the weak-shock regions is done by these three molecular species alone
The Transiting System GJ1214: High-Precision Defocused Transit Observations and a Search for Evidence of Transit Timing Variation
Aims: We present 11 high-precision photometric transit observations of the
transiting super-Earth planet GJ1214b. Combining these data with observations
from other authors, we investigate the ephemeris for possible signs of transit
timing variations (TTVs) using a Bayesian approach.
Methods: The observations were obtained using telescope-defocusing
techniques, and achieve a high precision with random errors in the photometry
as low as 1mmag per point. To investigate the possibility of TTVs in the light
curve, we calculate the overall probability of a TTV signal using Bayesian
methods.
Results: The observations are used to determine the photometric parameters
and the physical properties of the GJ1214 system. Our results are in good
agreement with published values. Individual times of mid-transit are measured
with uncertainties as low as 10s, allowing us to reduce the uncertainty in the
orbital period by a factor of two.
Conclusions: A Bayesian analysis reveals that it is highly improbable that
the observed transit times is explained by TTV, when compared with the simpler
alternative of a linear ephemeris.Comment: Submitted to A&
Structure and Colors of Diffuse Emission in the Spitzer Galactic First Look Survey
We investigate the density structure of the interstellar medium using new
high-resolution maps of the 8 micron, 24 micron, and 70 micron surface
brightness towards a molecular cloud in the Gum Nebula, made as part of the
Spitzer Space Telescope Galactic First Look Survey. The maps are correlated
with 100 micron images measured with IRAS. At 24 and 70 micron, the spatial
power spectrum of surface brightness follows a power law with spectral index
-3.5. At 24 micron, the power law behavior is remarkably consistent from the
0.2 degree size of our maps down to the 5 arcsecond spatial resolution. Thus,
the structure of the 24 micron emission is self-similar even at milliparsec
scales. The combined power spectrum produced from Spitzer 24 micron and IRAS 25
micron images is consistent with a change in the power law exponent from -2.6
to -3.5. The decrease may be due to the transition from a two-dimensional to
three-dimensional structure. Under this hypothesis, we estimate the thickness
of the emitting medium to be 0.3 pc.Comment: 13 Pages, 3 Figures, to be published in Astrophysical Journal
Supplement Series (Spitzer Special Issue), volume 154. Uses aastex v5.
OGLE-2005-BLG-018: Characterization of Full Physical and Orbital Parameters of a Gravitational Binary Lens
We present the analysis result of a gravitational binary-lensing event
OGLE-2005-BLG-018. The light curve of the event is characterized by 2 adjacent
strong features and a single weak feature separated from the strong features.
The light curve exhibits noticeable deviations from the best-fit model based on
standard binary parameters. To explain the deviation, we test models including
various higher-order effects of the motions of the observer, source, and lens.
From this, we find that it is necessary to account for the orbital motion of
the lens in describing the light curve. From modeling of the light curve
considering the parallax effect and Keplerian orbital motion, we are able to
measure not only the physical parameters but also a complete orbital solution
of the lens system. It is found that the event was produced by a binary lens
located in the Galactic bulge with a distance kpc from the Earth.
The individual lens components with masses and are separated with a semi-major axis of AU and
orbiting each other with a period yr. The event demonstrates
that it is possible to extract detailed information about binary lens systems
from well-resolved lensing light curves.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
OGLE-2017-BLG-0329L: A Microlensing Binary Characterized with Dramatically Enhanced Precision Using Data from Space-based Observations
Mass measurements of gravitational microlenses require one to determine the microlens parallax π E, but precise π E measurement, in many cases, is hampered due to the subtlety of the microlens-parallax signal combined with the difficulty of distinguishing the signal from those induced by other higher-order effects. In this work, we present the analysis of the binary-lens event OGLE-2017-BLG-0329, for which π E is measured with a dramatically improved precision using additional data from space-based Spitzer observations. We find that while the parallax model based on the ground-based data cannot be distinguished from a zero-π E model at the 2σ level, the addition of the Spitzer data enables us to identify two classes of solutions, each composed of a pair of solutions according to the well-known ecliptic degeneracy. It is found that the space-based data reduce the measurement uncertainties of the north and east components of the microlens-parallax vector π E by factors ~18 and ~4, respectively. With the measured microlens parallax combined with the angular Einstein radius measured from the resolved caustic crossings, we find that the lens is composed of a binary with component masses of either (M1, M2) ~ (1.1, 0.8) M⊙ or ~(0.4, 0.3) M⊙ according to the two solution classes. The first solution is significantly favored but the second cannot be securely ruled out based on the microlensing data alone. However, the degeneracy can be resolved from adaptive optics observations taken ~10 years after the event
OGLE-2005-BLG-153: Microlensing Discovery and Characterization of A Very Low Mass Binary
The mass function and statistics of binaries provide important diagnostics of
the star formation process. Despite this importance, the mass function at low
masses remains poorly known due to observational difficulties caused by the
faintness of the objects. Here we report the microlensing discovery and
characterization of a binary lens composed of very low-mass stars just above
the hydrogen-burning limit. From the combined measurements of the Einstein
radius and microlens parallax, we measure the masses of the binary components
of and . This discovery
demonstrates that microlensing will provide a method to measure the mass
function of all Galactic populations of very low mass binaries that is
independent of the biases caused by the luminosity of the population.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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