107 research outputs found
The Earth as an extrasolar transiting planet - II: HARPS and UVES detection of water vapor, biogenic O, and O
The atmospheric composition of transiting exoplanets can be characterized
during transit by spectroscopy. For the transit of an Earth twin, models
predict that biogenic and should be detectable, as well as water
vapour, a molecule linked to habitability as we know it on Earth. The aim is to
measure the Earth radius versus wavelength - or the atmosphere
thickness - at the highest spectral resolution available to fully
characterize the signature of Earth seen as a transiting exoplanet. We present
observations of the Moon eclipse of 21-12-2010. Seen from the Moon, the Earth
eclipses the Sun and opens access to the Earth atmosphere transmission
spectrum. We used HARPS and UVES spectrographs to take penumbra and umbra
high-resolution spectra from 3100 to 10400 Ang. A change of the quantity of
water vapour above the telescope compromised the quality of the UVES data. We
corrected for this effect in the data processing. We analyzed the data by 3
different methods. The 1st method is based on the analysis of pairs of penumbra
spectra. The 2nd makes use of a single penumbra spectrum, and the 3rd of all
penumbra and umbra spectra. Profiles are obtained with the three
methods for both instruments. The 1st method gives the best result, in
agreement with a model. The second method seems to be more sensitive to the
Doppler shift of solar spectral lines with respect to the telluric lines. The
3rd method makes use of umbra spectra which bias the result, but it can be
corrected for this a posteriori from results with the first method. The 3
methods clearly show the spectral signature of the Rayleigh scattering in the
Earth atmosphere and the bands of HO, O, and O. Sodium is detected.
Assuming no atmospheric perturbations, we show that the E-ELT is theoretically
able to detect the A-band in 8~h of integration for an Earth twin at
10pc.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in A&A - 21 pages, 27 figures.
Abstract above slightly shortened wrt the original. The ArXiv version has low
resolution figures, but a version with full resolution figures is available
here:
http://www.obs-hp.fr/~larnold/publi_to_download/eclipse2010_AA_v5_final.pd
Spectroscopic distance, mass, and age estimations for APOGEE DR17
We derive distances and masses of stars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS) Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) Data
Release 17 (DR17) using simple neural networks. Training data for distances
comes from Gaia EDR3, supplemented by literature distances for star clusters.
For masses, the network is trained using asteroseismic masses for evolved stars
and isochrone masses for main sequence stars. The models are trained on
effective temperature, surface gravity, metallicity and carbon and nitrogen
abundances. We found that our distance predictions have median fractional
errors that range from at low log g and at higher
log g with a standard deviation of . The mass predictions have a
standard deviation of . Using the masses, we derive ages for evolved
stars based on the correspondence between mass and age for giant stars given by
isochrones. The results are compiled into a Value Added Catalog (VAC) called
DistMass that contains distances and masses for 733901 independent spectra,
plus ages for 396548 evolved stars.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figure
Comparative analysis of atmospheric parameters from high-resolution spectroscopic sky surveys: APOGEE, GALAH, Gaia-ESO
SDSS-IV APOGEE-2, GALAH and Gaia-ESO are high resolution, ground-based,
multi-object spectroscopic surveys providing fundamental stellar atmospheric
parameters and multiple elemental abundance ratios for hundreds of thousands of
stars of the Milky Way. We undertake a comparison between the most recent data
releases of these surveys to investigate the accuracy and precision of derived
parameters by placing the abundances on an absolute scale. We discuss the
correlations in parameter and abundance differences as a function of main
parameters. Uncovering the variants provides a basis to on-going efforts of
future sky surveys. Quality samples from the APOGEE-GALAH, APOGEE-GES and
GALAH-GES overlapping catalogs are collected. We investigate the mean variants
between the surveys, and linear trends are also investigated. We compare the
slope of correlations and mean differences with the reported uncertainties. The
average and scatter of vrad, Teff, log g, [M/H] and vmicro, along with numerous
species of elemental abundances in the combined catalogs show that in general
there is a good agreement between the surveys. We find large radial velocity
scatters ranging from 1.3 km/s to 4.4 km/s when comparing the three surveys. We
observe weak trends: e.g. in Teff vs. log g for the APOGEE-GES
stars, and a clear correlation in the vmicro-vmicro planes in the
APOGEE-GALAH common sample. For [/H], [Ti/H] (APOGEE-GALAH giants) and
[Al/H] (APOGEE-GALAH dwarfs) potential strong correlations are discovered as a
function of the differences in the main atmospheric parameters, and we find
weak trends for other elements. In general we find good agreement between the
three surveys within their respective uncertainties. However, there are certain
regimes in which strong variants exist, which we discuss. There are still
offsets larger than 0.1 dex in the absolute abundance scales.Comment: Accepted in A&A, 23 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables. A minor correction
is applied to the Gaia-ESO Survey's solar reference: Grevesse et al. (2007)
instead of Grevesse & Sauval (1998
An Investigation of Non-Canonical Mixing in Red Giant Stars Using APOGEE 12C/13C Ratios Observed in Open Cluster Stars
Standard stellar evolution theory poorly predicts the surface abundances of
chemical species in low-mass, red giant branch (RGB) stars. Observations show
an enhancement of p-p chain and CNO cycle products in red giant envelopes,
which suggests the existence of non-canonical mixing that brings interior
burning products to the surface of these stars. The 12C/13C ratio is a highly
sensitive abundance metric used to probe this mixing. We investigate extra RGB
mixing by examining (1) how 12C/13C is altered along the RGB and (2) how
12C/13C changes for stars of varying age and mass. Our sample consists of 43
red giants spread over 15 open clusters from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey's
APOGEE DR17 that have reliable 12C/13C ratios derived from their APOGEE
spectra. We vetted these 12C/13C ratios and compared them as a function of
evolution and age/mass to the standard mixing model of stellar evolution and to
a model that includes prescriptions for RGB thermohaline mixing and stellar
rotation. We find that the observations deviate from standard mixing models,
implying the need for extra mixing. Additionally, some of the abundance
patterns depart from the thermohaline model, and it is unclear whether these
differences are due to incomplete observations, issues inherent to the model,
our assumption of the cause of extra mixing, or any combination of these
factors. Nevertheless, the surface abundances across our age/mass range clearly
deviate from the standard model, agreeing with the notion of a universal
mechanism for RGB extra mixing in low-mass stars.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Earth as an extrasolar transiting planet: Earth's atmospheric composition and thickness revealed by Lunar eclipse observations
An important goal within the quest for detecting an Earth-like extrasolar
planet, will be to identify atmospheric gaseous bio-signatures. Observations of
the light transmitted through the Earth's atmosphere, as for an extrasolar
planet, will be the first step for future comparisons. We have completed
observations of the Earth during a Lunar eclipse, a unique situation similar to
that of a transiting planet. We aim at showing what species could be detected
in its atmosphere at optical wavelengths, where a lot of photons are available
in the masked stellar light. We present observations of the 2008 August 16 Moon
eclipse performed with the SOPHIE spectrograph at the Observatoire de
Haute-Provence. Locating the spectrograph fibers in the penumbra of the
eclipse, the Moon irradiance is then a mix of direct, unabsorbed Sun light and
solar light that has passed through the Earth's limb. This mixture essentially
reproduces what is recorded during the transit of an extrasolar planet. We
report here the clear detection of several Earth atmospheric compounds in the
transmission spectra, such as ozone, molecular oxygen, and neutral sodium as
well as molecular nitrogen and oxygen through the Rayleigh signature. Moreover,
we present a method that allows us to derive the thickness of the atmosphere
versus the wavelength for penumbra eclipse observations. We quantitatively
evaluate the altitude at which the atmosphere becomes transparent for important
species like molecular oxygen and ozone, two species thought to be tightly
linked to the presence of life. The molecular detections presented here are an
encouraging first attempt, necessary to better prepare for the future of
extremely-large telescopes and transiting Earth-like planets. Instruments like
SOPHIE will be mandatory when characterizing the atmospheres of transiting
Earth-like planets from the ground and searching for bio-marker signatures.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
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