1,321 research outputs found
Planetary transit timing variations induced by stellar binarity. The light travel time effect
[ABRIDGED] Since the discovery of the first transiting extrasolar planet,
transit timing has been recognized as a powerful method to discover and
characterize additional planets in these systems. However, the gravitational
influence of additional planets is not the only expected source of transit
timing variations. In this work, we derive the expected detection frequency of
stellar companions of hot-jupiter transiting planets host-stars, detectable by
means of transit timing analysis. Since roughly half of the stars in the solar
neighborhood belong to binary or multiple stellar systems, the same fraction of
binary systems may be expected to be present among transiting planet-host
stars, unless planet formation is significantly influenced by the presence of a
stellar companion. Transit searches are less affected by the selection biases
against long-period binaries that plague radial velocity surveys. If the
frequency of binaries among hot-jupiter planets host stars is the same as
determined in the solar neighborhood, after 5 years since the discovery of a
sample of transiting planets 1.0%+/-0.2% of them have a probability >99% to
present transit timing variations >50 sec induced by stellar binarity, and
2.8%+/-0.3% after 10 years, if the planetary and binary orbits are coplanar.
Considering the case of random inclinations the probabilities are 0.6%+/-0.1%
and 1.7%+/-0.2% after 5 and 10 years respectively. Our estimates can be
considered conservative lower limits, since we have taken into account only
binaries with periods P>5x10^3 days (a>=6 AU). Our simulations indicate that
transit timing variations due to the light travel time effect allow discovery
of stellar companions up to maximum separations equal to a\sim36 AU after 5
years since the discovery of the planet (a\sim75 AU after 10 years).Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in A&
Improvements on analytic modelling of stellar spots
In this work we present the solution of the stellar spot problem using the
Kelvin-Stokes theorem. Our result is applicable for any given location and
dimension of the spots on the stellar surface. We present explicitely the
result up to the second degree in the limb darkening law. This technique can be
used to calculate very efficiently mutual photometric effects produced by
eclipsing bodies occulting stellar spots and to construct complex spot shapes.Comment: Resubmitted to MNRAS after accounting for minor comments of second
review, 9 pages, 5 figures, software available at
http://eduscisoft.com/KSINT
SOAP-T: A tool to study the light-curve and radial velocity of a system with a transiting planet and a rotating spotted star
We present an improved version of SOAP (Boisse et al. 2012) named "SOAP-T",
which can generate the radial velocity variations and light-curves for systems
consisting of a rotating spotted star with a transiting planet. This tool can
be used to study the anomalies inside transit light-curves and the
Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, to better constrain the orbital configuration and
properties of planetary systems and active zones of their host stars. Tests of
the code are presented to illustrate its performance and to validate its
capability when compared with analytical models and real data. Finally, we
apply SOAP-T to the active star, HAT-P-11, observed by the NASA Kepler space
telescope and use this system to discuss the capability of this tool in
analyzing light-curves for the cases where the transiting planet overlaps with
the star's spots.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
A hot horizontal branch star with a close K-type main-sequence companion
Dynamical interactions in binary systems are thought to play a major role in
the formation of extreme horizontal branch stars (EHBs) in the Galactic field.
However, it is still unclear if the same mechanisms are at work in globular
clusters, where EHBs are predominantly single stars. Here we report on the
discovery of a unique close binary system (period ~1.61 days) in the globular
cluster NGC6752, comprising an EHB and a main-sequence companion of 0.63+-0.05
Msun. Such a system has no counterpart among nearly two hundred known EHB
binaries in the Galactic field. Its discovery suggests that either field
studies are incomplete, missing this type of systems possibly because of
selection effects, or that a particular EHB formation mechanism is active in
clusters but not in the field
Health and the Economy : a statement of concern
The relationship between health and the economy is an intimate and complex one. The economy of health and the apportioning of funds to different medical services and health care programs are issues that depend on the health profile of a given community as well as the expectations of its members. Decisions ultimately depend on available resources and political priorities. Health and the economy cannot be isolated and contrasted, as the integrity of a given economic system clearly depends on the state of health of the community both at an individual level as well as at a population level.peer-reviewe
Il GIS come strumento di fruizione territoriale e valorizzazione turistica
The goal of this work has been to achieve a Geographic Information System, using innovative
cartographic representation of the land and landscape, which can provide to the end users an easier
and immediate access regarding tourist, cultural and environmental information.
This is an ongoing research, carried out in collaboration with the Department of Civil, Engineering,
Environmental, Aerospace, Materials (DICAM) of University of Palermo, with the objective to
548
Atti 17a Conferenza Nazionale ASITA - Riva del Garda 5-7 novembre 2013
achieve a complete integration between software used only by qualified specialists in the field and
online platforms display.
To experience this work, has been used tourist information about the four regional Sicilian Parks:
Madonie, Nebrodi, Etna and Alcantara.
The software tools used in this project are the ESRI ArcGIS 9 and Google Earth for the display
platform of the virtual globe.
For such purpose, the study has been divided into three steps:
\uf0b7 First step: gathering maps necessary in order to achieve the objectives and the realization of
the thematic maps, either for the environmentally protective restrictions and the territorial
administrative boundary.
\uf0b7 Second step: research and selection of tourist information for each park; creation and
processing of its thematic maps.
\uf0b7 Third step: export of thematic maps in Google Earth using KML interchange format,
integrated with the addition of metadata containing the characteristics of places.
The results obtained to date from this research show that the integration of GIS and online display
platforms of satellite images, enriched in geographic content, can be valuable support to the new
vision of \u201cdigital tourism\u201d, allowing the use of tourist information to heterogeneous users not
necessarily specialized.
This study, in the near future, can be extended embracing new environmental contexts and more
tourist information
A new analysis of the WASP-3 system: no evidence for an additional companion
In this work we investigate the problem concerning the presence of additional
bodies gravitationally bounded with the WASP-3 system. We present eight new
transits of this planet and analyse all the photometric and radial velocity
data published so far. We did not observe significant periodicities in the
Fourier spectrum of the observed minus calculated (O-C) transit timing and
radial velocity diagrams (the highest peak having false-alarm probabilities of
56 per cent and 31 per cent, respectively) or long-term trends. Combining all
the available information, we conclude that the radial velocity and transit
timing techniques exclude, at 99 per cent confidence limit, any perturber more
massive than M \gtrsim 100 M_Earth with periods up to 10 times the period of
the inner planet. We also investigate the possible presence of an exomoon on
this system and determined that considering the scatter of the O-C transit
timing residuals a coplanar exomoon would likely produce detectable transits.
This hypothesis is however apparently ruled out by observations conducted by
other researchers. In case the orbit of the moon is not coplanar the accuracy
of our transit timing and transit duration measurements prevents any
significant statement. Interestingly, on the basis of our reanalysis of SOPHIE
data we noted that WASP-3 passed from a less active (log R'_hk=-4.95) to a more
active (log R'_hk=-4.8) state during the 3 yr monitoring period spanned by the
observations. Despite no clear spot crossing has been reported for this system,
this analysis claims for a more intensive monitoring of the activity level of
this star in order to understand its impact on photometric and radial velocity
measurements.Comment: MNRAS accepted (14/08/2012
Further constraints on the optical transmission spectrum of HAT-P-1b
We report on novel observations of HAT-P-1 aimed at constraining the optical
transmission spectrum of the atmosphere of its transiting Hot-Jupiter
exoplanet. Ground-based differential spectrophotometry was performed over two
transit windows using the DOLORES spectrograph at the Telescopio Nazionale
Galileo (TNG). Our measurements imply an average planet to star radius ratio
equal to =(0.11590.0005). This result is consistent
with the value obtained from recent near infrared measurements of this object
but differs from previously reported optical measurements being lower by around
4.4 exoplanet scale heights. Analyzing the data over 5 different spectral bins
600\AA wide we observed a single peaked spectrum (3.7 level)
with a blue cut-off corresponding to the blue edge of the broad absorption wing
of sodium and an increased absorption in the region in between 6180-7400\AA. We
also infer that the width of the broad absorption wings due to alkali metals is
likely narrower than the one implied by solar abundance clear atmospheric
models. We interpret the result as evidence that HAT-P-1b has a partially clear
atmosphere at optical wavelengths with a more modest contribution from an
optical absorber than previously reported.Comment: Accepted by Ap
On the HI-Hole and AGB Stellar Population of the Sagittarius Dwarf Irregular Galaxy
Using two HST/ACS data-sets that are separated by ~2 years has allowed us to
derive the relative proper-motion for the Sagittarius dwarf irregular (SagDIG)
and reduce the heavy foreground Galactic contamination. The proper-motion
decontaminated SagDIG catalog provides a much clearer view of the young
red-supergiant and intermediate-age asymptotic giant branch populations. We
report the identification of 3 Milky Way carbon-rich dwarf stars, probably
belonging to the thin disk, and pointing to the high incidence of this class at
low Galactic latitudes. A sub-group of 4 oxygen-rich candidate stars depicts a
faint, red extension of the well-defined SagDIG carbon-rich sequence. The
origin of these oxygen-rich candidate stars remains unclear, reflecting the
uncertainty in the ratio of carbon/oxygen rich stars. SagDIG is also a gas-rich
galaxy characterized by a single large cavity in the gas disk (HI-hole), which
is offset by ~360 pc from the optical centre of the galaxy. We nonetheless
investigate the stellar feedback hypothesis by comparing the proper-motion
cleaned stellar populations within the HI-hole with appropriately selected
comparison regions, having higher HI densities external to the hole. The
comparison shows no significant differences. In particular, the centre of the
HI-hole (and the comparison regions) lack stellar populations younger than ~400
Myr, which are otherwise abundant in the inner body of the galaxy. We conclude
that there is no convincing evidence that the SagDIG HI-hole is the result of
stellar feedback, and that gravitational and thermal instabilities in the gas
are the most likely mechanism for its formation.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 11 pages, 6 jpeg figure
- âŠ