1,021 research outputs found
Herschel/PACS View Of Disks Around Low-Mass Stars And Brown Dwarfs In The TW Hydrae Association
We conducted Herschel/PACS observations of five very low-mass stars or brown dwarfs located in the TW Hya association with the goal of characterizing the properties of disks in the low stellar mass regime. We detected all five targets at 70 mu m and 100 mu m and three targets at 160 mu m. Our observations, combined with previous photometry from 2MASS, WISE, and SCUBA-2, enabled us to construct spectral energy distributions (SEDs) with extended wavelength coverage. Using sophisticated radiative transfer models, we analyzed the observed SEDs of the five detected objects with a hybrid fitting strategy that combines the model grids and the simulated annealing algorithm and evaluated the constraints on the disk properties via the Bayesian inference method. The modeling suggests that disks around low-mass stars and brown dwarfs are generally flatter than their higher mass counterparts, but the range of disk mass extends to well below the value found in T Tauri stars, and the disk scale heights are comparable in both groups. The inferred disk properties (i.e., disk mass, flaring, and scale height) in the low stellar mass regime are consistent with previous findings from large samples of brown dwarfs and very low-mass stars. We discuss the dependence of disk properties on their host stellar parameters and find a significant correlation between the Herschel far-IR fluxes and the stellar effective temperatures, probably indicating that the scaling between the stellar and disk masses (i.e., M-disk proportional to M-star) observed mainly in low-mass stars may extend down to the brown dwarf regime.Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province of China BK20141046Youth Qianren Program of the National Science Foundation of ChinaNational Aeronautics and Space AdministrationStrategic Priority Research Program >The Emergence of Cosmological Structures> of the Chinese Academy of Sciences XDB09000000Astronom
Near-infrared Linear Polarization of Ultracool Dwarfs
We report on near-infrared J- and H-band linear polarimetric photometry of
eight ultracool dwarfs (two late-M, five L0-L7.5, and one T2.5) with known
evidence for photometric variability due to dust clouds, anomalous red infrared
colors, or low-gravity atmospheres. The polarimetric data were acquired with
the LIRIS instrument on the William Herschel Telescope. We also provide
mid-infrared photometry in the interval 3.4-24 micron for some targets obtained
with Spitzer and WISE, which has allowed us to confirm the peculiar red colors
of five sources in the sample. We can impose modest upper limits of 0.9% and
1.8% on the linear polarization degree for seven targets with a confidence of
99%. Only one source, 2MAS, J02411151-0326587 (L0), appears to be strongly
polarized (P ~ 3%) in the J-band with a significance level of P/sigma_P ~ 10.
The likely origin of its linearly polarized light and rather red infrared
colors may reside in a surrounding disk with an asymmetric distribution of
grains. Given its proximity (66 +/- 8 pc), this object becomes an excellent
target for the direct detection of the disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Investigating Atomic Details of the CaF(111) Surface with a qPlus Sensor
The (111) surface of CaF has been intensively studied with
large-amplitude frequency-modulation atomic force microscopy and atomic
contrast formation is now well understood. It has been shown that the apparent
contrast patterns obtained with a polar tip strongly depend on the tip
terminating ion and three sub-lattices of anions and cations can be imaged.
Here, we study the details of atomic contrast formation on CaF(111) with
small-amplitude force microscopy utilizing the qPlus sensor that has been shown
to provide utmost resolution at high scanning stability. Step edges resulting
from cleaving crystals in-situ in the ultra-high vacuum appear as very sharp
structures and on flat terraces, the atomic corrugation is seen in high clarity
even for large area scans. The atomic structure is also not lost when scanning
across triple layer step edges. High resolution scans of small surface areas
yield contrast features of anion- and cation sub-lattices with unprecedented
resolution. These contrast patterns are related to previously reported
theoretical results.Comment: 18 pages, 9 Figures, presented at 7th Int Conf Noncontact AFM
Seattle, USA Sep 12-15 2004, accepted for publication in Nanotechnology,
http://www.iop.or
Infrared and kinematic properties of the substellar object G 196-3B
We report unusual near- and mid-infrared photometric properties of G 196-3 B,
the young substellar companion at 16 arcsec from the active M2.5-type star G
196-3 A, using data taken with the IRAC and MIPS instruments onboard Spitzer. G
196-3 B shows markedly redder colors at all wavelengths from 1.6 up to 24
micron than expected for its spectral type, which is determined at L3 from
optical and near-infrared spectra. We discuss various physical scenarios to
account for its reddish nature, and conclude that a low-gravity atmosphere with
enshrouded upper atmospheric layers and/or a warm dusty disk/envelope provides
the most likely explanations, the two of them consistent with an age in the
interval 20-300 Myr. We also present new and accurate separate proper motion
measurements for G 196-3 A and B confirming that both objects are
gravitationally linked and share the same motion within a few mas/yr. After
integration of the combined spectrophotometric spectral energy distributions,
we obtain that the difference in the bolometric magnitudes of G 196-3 A and B
is 6.15 +/- 0.10 mag. Kinematic consideration of the Galactic space motions of
the system for distances in the interval 15-30 pc suggests that the pair is a
likely member of the Local Association, and that it lay near the past positions
of young star clusters like alpha Persei less than 85 Myr ago, where the binary
might have originated. At these young ages, the mass of G 196-3 B would be in
the range 12-25 Mjup, close to the frontier between planets and brown dwarfs.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Rotationally Warm Molecular Hydrogen in the Orion Bar
The Orion Bar is one of the nearest and best-studied photodissociation or
photon-dominated regions (PDRs). Observations reveal the presence of H2 lines
from vibrationally or rotationally excited upper levels that suggest warm gas
temperatures (400 to 700 K). However, standard models of PDRs are unable to
reproduce such warm rotational temperatures. In this paper we attempt to
explain these observations with new comprehensive models which extend from the
H+ region through the Bar and include the magnetic field in the equation of
state. We adopt the model parameters from our previous paper which successfully
reproduced a wide variety of spectral observations across the Bar. In this
model the local cosmic-ray density is enhanced above the galactic background,
as is the magnetic field, and which increases the cosmic-ray heating elevating
the temperature in the molecular region. The pressure is further enhanced above
the gas pressure in the H+ region by the momentum transferred from the absorbed
starlight. Here we investigate whether the observed H2 lines can be reproduced
with standard assumptions concerning the grain photoelectric emission. We also
explore the effects due to the inclusion of recently computed H2 + H2, H2 + H
and H2 + He collisional rate coefficients.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (34 pages, including 16 figures
Deep Near-Infrared Imaging of the rho Oph Cloud Core: Clues to the Origin of the Lowest-Mass Brown Dwarfs
A search for young substellar objects in the rho Oph cloud core region has
been made using the deep-integration Combined Calibration Scan images of the
2MASS extended mission in J, H and Ks bands, and Spitzer IRAC images at 3.6,
4.5, 5.8 and 8.0 microns. The field of view of the combined observations was 1
deg x 9.3 arcmin, and the 5 sigma limiting magnitude at J was 20.5. Comparison
of the observed SEDs with the predictions of the COND and DUSTY models, for an
assumed age of 1 Myr, supports the identification of many of the sources with
brown dwarfs, and enables the estimation of effective temperature, Teff. The
cluster members are then readily distinguishable from background stars by their
locations on a plot of flux density versus Teff. The range of estimated Teff
extends down to ~ 750 K, suggesting the presence of objects of sub-Jupiter
mass. The results also suggest that the mass function for the rho Oph cloud
resembles that of the sigma Orionis cluster based on a recent study, with both
rising towards lower masses. The other main result from our study is the
apparent presence of a progressive blueward skew in the distribution of J-H and
H-Ks colors, such that the blue end of the range becomes increasingly bluer
with increasing magnitude. We suggest that this behavior might be understood in
terms of the 'ejected stellar embryo' hypothesis, whereby some of the
lowest-mass brown dwarfs could escape to locations close to the front edge of
the cloud, and thereby be seen with less extinction.Comment: 37 pages, 10 figures; to be published in Ap
Two Wide Planetary-Mass Companions to Solar-Type Stars in Upper Scorpius
At wide separations, planetary-mass and brown dwarf companions to solar type
stars occupy a curious region of parameters space not obviously linked to
binary star formation or solar-system scale planet formation. These companions
provide insight into the extreme case of companion formation (either binary or
planetary), and due to their relative ease of observation when compared to
close companions, they offer a useful template for our expectations of more
typical planets. We present the results from an adaptive optics imaging survey
for wide (50-500 AU) companions to solar type stars in Upper Scorpius. We
report one new discovery of a ~14 M_J companion around GSC 06214-00210, and
confirm that the candidate planetary mass companion 1RXS J160929.1-210524
detected by Lafreniere et al (2008) is in fact co-moving with its primary star.
In our survey, these two detections correspond to ~4% of solar type stars
having companions in the 6-20 M_J mass and 200-500 AU separation range. This
figure is higher than would be expected if brown dwarfs and planetary mass
companions were drawn from an extrapolation of the binary mass function.
Finally, we discuss implications for the formation of these objects.Comment: 11 Pages, 7 Figures, Accepted for Ap
A Search for Variability in Exoplanet Analogues and Low-Gravity Brown Dwarfs
We report the results of a -band survey for photometric variability in a
sample of young, low-gravity objects using the New Technology Telescope (NTT)
and the United Kingdom InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT). Surface gravity is a key
parameter in the atmospheric properties of brown dwarfs and this is the first
large survey that aims to test the gravity dependence of variability
properties. We do a full analysis of the spectral signatures of youth and
assess the group membership probability of each target using membership tools
from the literature. This results in a 30 object sample of young low-gravity
brown dwarfs. Since we are lacking in objects with spectral types later than
L9, we focus our statistical analysis on the L0-L8.5 objects. We find that the
variability occurrence rate of L0-L8.5 low-gravity brown dwarfs in this survey
is . We reanalyse the results of Radigan 2014 and find that
the field dwarfs with spectral types L0-L8.5 have a variability occurrence rate
of . We determine a probability of that the samples are
drawn from different distributions. This is the first quantitative indication
that the low-gravity objects are more likely to be variable than the field
dwarf population. Furthermore, we present follow-up and
observations of the young, planetary-mass variable object PSO 318.5-22 over
three consecutive nights. We find no evidence of phase shifts between the
and bands and find higher amplitudes. We use the lightcurves
to measure a rotational period of hr for PSO 318.5-22.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
A focus on L dwarfs with trigonometric parallaxes
This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article published in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Under embargo until 14 May 2019. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/aaacc5.We report new parallax measurements for ten L and early T type dwarfs, five of which have no previous published values, using observations over 3 years at the robotic Liverpool Telescope. The resulting parallaxes and proper motions have median errors of 2\,mas and 1.5\,mas/year respectively. Their space motions indicate they are all Galactic disk members. We combined this sample with other objects with astrometry from the Liverpool Telescope and with published literature astrometry to construct a sample of 260 L and early T type dwarfs with measured parallaxes, designated the Astrometry Sample. We study the kinematics of the Astrometry Sample, and derived a solar motion of \,\kms~ with respect to the local standard of rest, in agreement with recent literature. We derive a kinematic age of 1.5-1.7\,Gyr for the Astrometry Sample assuming the age increases monotonically with the total velocity for a given disk sample. This kinematic age is less than half literature values for other low mass dwarf samples. We believe this difference arises for two reasons (1) the sample is mainly composed of mid to late L dwarfs which are expected to be relatively young and (2) the requirement that objects have a measured parallax biases the sample to the brighter examples which tend to be younger.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
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