60 research outputs found
Mutual detectability: a targeted SETI strategy that avoids the SETI Paradox
As our ability to undertake more powerful Searches for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence (SETI) grows, so does interest in the more controversial endeavour
of Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI). METI proponents point to the
SETI Paradox - if all civilisations refrain from METI then SETI is futile. I
introduce Mutual Detectability as a game-theoretic strategy aimed at increasing
the success potential of targeted SETI. Mutual detectability is embodied by
four laws: mutuality, symmetry, opportunity and superiority. These laws
establish how SETI participants can engage each other using game theory
principles applied to mutual evidence of mutual existence. The law of
superiority establishes an "onus to transmit" on the party whom both SETI
participants can judge to have better quality evidence, or common denominator
information (CDI), thus avoiding the SETI Paradox. I argue that transiting
exoplanets within the Earth Transit Zone form a target subset that satisfies
mutual detectability requirements. I identify the intrinsic time-integrated
transit signal strength as suitable CDI. Civilisations on habitable-zone
planets of radius have
superior CDI on us, so have game-theory incentive (onus) to transmit. Whilst
this implies that the onus to transmit falls on us for habitable planets around
stars, considerations of relative stellar frequency,
main-sequence lifetime and planet occurrence mean such systems are likely a
small minority. Surveys of the Earth Transit Zone for Earth-analogue transits
around sub-solar luminosity hosts, followed up by targeted SETI monitoring of
them, represent an efficient strategy compliant with mutual detectability. A
choice to remain silent, by not engaging in METI towards such systems, does not
in this case fuel concerns of a SETI Paradox.Comment: Author Accepted Manuscript. Published in A
Reference image selection for difference imaging analysis
Difference image analysis (DIA) is an effective technique for obtaining
photometry in crowded fields, relative to a chosen reference image. As yet,
however, optimal reference image selection is an unsolved problem. We examine
how this selection depends on the combination of seeing, background and
detector pixel size. Our tests use a combination of simulated data and quality
indicators from DIA of well-sampled optical data and under-sampled
near-infrared data from the OGLE and VVV surveys, respectively. We search for a
figure-of-merit (FoM) which could be used to select reference images for each
survey. While we do not find a universally applicable FoM, survey-specific
measures indicate that the effect of spatial under-sampling may require a
change in strategy from the standard DIA approach, even though seeing remains
the primary criterion. We find that background is not an important criterion
for reference selection, at least for the dynamic range in the images we test.
For our analysis of VVV data in particular, we find that spatial under-sampling
is best handled by reversing the standard DIA procedure and convolving target
images to a better-sampled (poor seeing) reference image.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
The detectability of habitable exomoons with Kepler
In this paper, the detectability of habitable exomoons orbiting around giant
planets in M-dwarf systems using Transit Timing Variations (TTVs) and Transit
Timing Durations (TDVs) with Kepler-class photometry is investigated. Light
curves of systems with various configurations were simulated around M-dwarf
hosts of mass 0.5 Msun and radius 0.55 Rsun. Jupiter-like giant planets which
offer the best potential for hosting habitable exomoons were considered with
rocky super-Earth-mass moons. The detectability is measured by using the
phase-correlation between TTV and TDV signals. Since the TDV signal is
typically weaker than the TTV signal, confirmation of an exomoon detection will
depend on being able to detect a TDV signal. We find that exomoons around
planets orbiting within the habitable zone of an M-dwarf host star can produce
both detectable TTV and TDV signatures with Kepler-class photometry. While
aliasing between the planet period and moon period may hinder exomoon
detection, we also find some strong correlation signatures in our simulation
(eg. correlation: >0.7) which would provide convincing exomoon signatures. With
the addition of red noise stellar variability, correlations generally weaken.
However simulated examples with planet masses less than around 25 Mearth, moons
of mass 8-10 Mearth and specific values of planet and moon periods still yield
detectable correlation in 25-50% of cases. Our simulation indicates that Kepler
provides one of the best available opportunities for exomoon detection.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, Accepted by MNRA
Pre-discovery transits of the exoplanets WASP-18 b and WASP-33 b from Hipparcos
We recover transits of WASP-18 b and WASP-33 b from Hipparcos (1989-1993)
photometry. Marginal detections of HAT-P-56 b and HAT-P-2 b may be also present
in the data. New ephemerides are fitted to WASP-18 b and WASP-33 b. A tentative
(~1.3 sigma) orbital decay is measured for WASP-18 b, but the implied tidal
quality factor (Q' ~ 5 x 10^5) is small and survival time (<10^6 years) is too
short to be likely. No orbital decay is measured for WASP-33 b, and a limit of
Q' > 2 x 10^5 is placed. For both planets, the uncertainties in published
ephemerides appear underestimated: the uncertainty in the period derivative of
WASP-18 b would be greatly reduced if its current ephemeris could be better
determined.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Accepted MNRAS Letter
Microlensing Halo Models with Abundant Brown Dwarfs
All previous attempts to understand the microlensing results towards the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) have assumed homogeneous present day mass
functions (PDMFs) for the lensing populations. Here, we present an
investigation into the microlensing characteristics of haloes with spatially
varying PDMFs and anisotropic velocity dispersion tensors. One attractive
possibility -- suggested by baryonic dark cluster formation in pregalactic and
protogalactic cooling flows -- is that the inner halo is dominated by stellar
mass objects, whereas low mass brown dwarfs become more prevalent on moving
outwards. The contribution to the microlensing rate must be dominated by dark
remnants (of about 0.5 solar masses) to recover the observed timescales of the
microlensing experiments. But, even though stellar remnants control the rate,
they do not dominate the mass of the baryonic halo, and so the well-known
enrichment and mass budget problems are much less severe. Using a simple ansatz
for the spatial variation of the PDMF, models are constructed in which the
contribution of brown dwarfs to the mass of the baryonic halo is 55 % and to
the total halo is 30 %. An unusual property of the models is that they predict
that the average timescale of events towards M31 is shorter than the average
timescale towards the LMC. This is because the longer line of sight towards M31
probes more of the far halo where brown dwarfs are the most common constituent.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, in press at The Astrophysical Journal (Letters
Breaking up with the continuous exoplanet mass-radius relation
We use a carefully selected subsample of 1053 confirmed exoplanets from the
NASA Exoplanet Archive to construct empirical power-law exoplanet
mass-radius-temperature (--) relations. Using orthogonal distance
regression to account for errors in both mass and radius, we allow the data to
decide: 1) the number of distinct planetary regimes; 2) whether the boundaries
of these regimes are best described by broken power laws joined at mass break
points, or by discontinuous power laws motivated by changes in equations of
state and temperature. We find strong support from the data for three distinct
planetary - regimes and for those regimes to be discontinuous. Our most
successful model involves an -- relation in which ice/rock (rocky) and
ice-giant (neptunian) planets are segregated by a pure-ice equation of state,
whilst neptunes and gas giant (jovian) planets are segregated by a mass break
at . The rocky planet regime is shown to
follow , whilst neptunes have . Planets in both regimes are seen to extend to similar maximum
masses. In the jovian regime, we find that , where is the planet equilibrium temperature. This implies that, for
jovian planets detected so far, equilibrium temperature alone provides a robust
estimator of mass.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. For submission to The Open Journal of
Astrophysic
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