242 research outputs found
The MEarth project: searching for transiting habitable super-Earths around nearby M-dwarfs
Due to their small radii, M-dwarfs are very promising targets to search for
transiting super-Earths, with a planet of 2 Earth radii orbiting an M5 dwarf in
the habitable zone giving rise to a 0.5% photometric signal, with a period of
two weeks. This can be detected from the ground using modest-aperture
telescopes by targeting samples of nearby M-dwarfs. Such planets would be very
amenable to follow-up studies due to the brightness of the parent stars, and
the favourable planet-star flux ratio. MEarth is such a transit survey of ~2000
nearby M-dwarfs. Since the targets are distributed over the entire (Northern)
sky, it is necessary to observe them individually, which will be done by using
8 independent 0.4m robotic telescopes, two of which have been in operation
since December 2007 at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory (FLWO) located on
Mount Hopkins, Arizona. We discuss the survey design and hardware, and report
on the current status of the survey, and preliminary results obtained from the
commissioning data.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of the 253rd IAU
Symposium: "Transiting Planets", May 2008, Cambridge, M
HST Observations and Models of The Gravitational Lens System MG 0414+0534
Quadruple gravitational lens systems offer the possibility of measuring time
delays for image pairs, microlensing effects, and extinction in distant
galaxies. Observations of these systems may be used to obtain estimates of H_o
and to study the various mass components of lens galaxies at high redshifts.
With HST, we have observed the reddest known gravitational lens system, MG
0414+0534. We used WFPC2/PC1 to obtain deep, high-resolution images with two
filters, F675W and F814W. We present a detailed analysis of all of the
components, as well as macrolens models. Our main results are: (1) confirmation
that MG 0414+0534 is inescapably a gravitational lens system; (2) discovery of
a blue arc connecting the 3 brightest images of the QSO central core; (3)
accurate positions and apparent brightnesses for all 4 known images of the QSO
central core and for the lens galaxy G; (4) a good representation of the
brightness distribution of G by elliptical isophotes with a De Vaucouleurs
profile, characteristic of an elliptical galaxy; (5) models that consist of
simple elliptical potentials and account qualitatively, not quantitatively, for
the HST image positions, arc morphology and radio flux ratios for the images of
the QSO central core; (6) a possible new test to distinguish between reddening
in the host galaxy of the QSO and in the lens galaxy, based on future accurate
measurements of spatial variations in the color of the arc; and (7) the
suggestion that microlensing is a plausible cause for the differences between
the radio and optical flux ratios for the brightest images, A1 and A2. Further
observations and measurements such as of the redshift of the lens galaxy, can
be used fruitfully to study microlensing for this system.Comment: 27 pages, 8 .ps figs, AAS Latex, AJ, in press, Feb 199
Light versus dark in strong-lens galaxies: Dark matter haloes that are rounder than their stars
We measure the projected density profile, shape and alignment of the stellar
and dark matter mass distribution in 11 strong-lens galaxies. We find that the
projected dark matter density profile - under the assumption of a Chabrier
stellar initial mass function - shows significant variation from galaxy to
galaxy. Those with an outermost image beyond kpc are very well fit by
a projected NFW profile; those with images within 10 kpc appear to be more
concentrated than NFW, as expected if their dark haloes contract due to
baryonic cooling. We find that over several half-light radii, the dark matter
haloes of these lenses are rounder than their stellar mass distributions. While
the haloes are never more elliptical than , their stars can
extend to . Galaxies with high dark matter ellipticity and weak
external shear show strong alignment between light and dark; those with strong
shear () can be highly misaligned. This is reassuring since
isolated misaligned galaxies are expected to be unstable. Our results provide a
new constraint on galaxy formation models. For a given cosmology, these must
explain the origin of both very round dark matter haloes and misaligned
strong-lens systems.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication by MNRA
Resolving the baryon-fraction profile in lensing galaxies
We show the radial dependence of stellar baryon fraction curves derived for
21 lensing galaxies from the CfA-Arizona Space Telescope LEns Survey by means
of stellar population synthesis and pixel-based mass reconstruction. The sample
covers a stellar mass range of Ms~2x10^9-3x10^11 Msol (solar masses) which
corresponds to a total mass range of ML~7x10^9-3x10^12 Msol on scales from 0.25
to 5 Re (effective radii). By examining the Ms-to-ML dependence on radial
distance to the center of each galaxy we find pairs of lenses on small to
intermediate mass scales which approach at large radii the same values for
their enclosed total mass but exhibit very different stellar masses and stellar
baryon fractions. This behaviour subsides for the most massive lenses. All
baryon fraction profiles show that the dark matter halo overtakes the stellar
content between 1.5 and 2.5 Re. We find evidence for a stellar baryon fraction
steadily declining over the full mass range. We shed light on the Fundamental
Plane puzzle by showing that the slope of the ML(<R)-to-Ms(<R) relation
approaches the mass-to-light relation of recent Fundamental Plane studies at
large radii. Less massive dark matter halos turn out to be influenced by the
distribution of stellar matter on resolved scales below 10 kpc. The ongoing
study of resolved baryon fraction profiles will make it possible to evaluate
the validity of star formation models as well as adiabatic contraction
prescriptions commonly used in simulations. [abridged]Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, 2 tables, 1 ancillary file, accepted for
publication in Ap
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