888 research outputs found
The WISE InfraRed Excesses around Degenerates (WIRED) Survey
The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) is a NASA medium class Explorer
mission that performed an all sky survey in four infrared bands. We present an overview of the WISE
InfraRed Excesses around Degenerates (WIRED) Survey, which has the goals of characterizing
white dwarf stars in the WISE bands, confirming objects known to have infrared excess from past
observations, and revealing new examples of white dwarfs with infrared excess that can be attributed
to unresolved companions or debris disks. We obtained preliminary WISE detections (S/N > 2) in
at least one band of 405 white dwarfs from the 9316 unique possible targets in the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey Data Release 4 Catalog of Spectroscopically Identified White Dwarfs (not all potential
targets were available in the sky coverage used here). A companion paper in this volume discusses
specific results from our target detections
The WIRED Survey. IV. New Dust Disks from the McCook & Sion White Dwarf Catalog
We have compiled photometric data from the Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer All Sky Survey and other archival sources for the more than 2200
objects in the original McCook & Sion Catalog of Spectroscopically Identified
White Dwarfs. We applied color-selection criteria to identify 28 targets whose
infrared spectral energy distributions depart from the expectation for the
white dwarf photosphere alone. Seven of these are previously known white dwarfs
with circumstellar dust disks, five are known central stars of planetary
nebulae, and six were excluded for being known binaries or having possible
contamination of their infrared photometry. We fit white dwarf models to the
spectral energy distributions of the remaining ten targets, and find seven new
candidates with infrared excess suggesting the presence of a circumstellar dust
disk. We compare the model dust disk properties for these new candidates with a
comprehensive compilation of previously published parameters for known white
dwarfs with dust disks. It is possible that the current census of white dwarfs
with dust disks that produce an excess detectable at K-band and shorter
wavelengths is close to complete for the entire sample of known WDs to the
detection limits of existing near-IR all-sky surveys. The white dwarf dust disk
candidates now being found using longer wavelength infrared data are drawn from
a previously underrepresented region of parameter space, in which the dust
disks are overall cooler, narrower in radial extent, and/or contain fewer
emitting grains.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal; 34 pages, 5
figures, 5 tables; added missing reference in Section 2 (p. 7
A Spitzer Space Telescope Study of the Debris Disks around four SDSS White Dwarfs
We present Spitzer Space Telescope data of four isolated white dwarfs that
were previously known to harbor circumstellar gaseous disks. IRAC photometry
shows a significant infrared excess in all of the systems, SDSS0738+1835,
SDSS0845+2257, SDSS1043+0855 and SDSS1617+1620, indicative of a dusty extension
to those disks. The 4.5-micron excesses seen in SDSS0738, SDSS0845, and
SDSS1617 are 7.5, 5.7 and 4.5 times the white dwarf contribution, respectively.
In contrast, in SDSS1043, the measured flux density at 4.5 microns is only 1.7
times the white dwarf contribution. We compare the measured IR excesses in the
systems to models of geometrically thin, optically thick disks, and find that
we are able to match the measured SEDs to within 3 sigma of the uncertainties,
although disks with unfeasibly hot inner dust temperatures generally provide a
better fit than those below the dust sublimation temperature. Possible
explanations for the dearth of dust around SDSS1043+0855 are briefly discussed.
Including our previous study of SDSS1228+1040, all five white dwarfs with
gaseous debris disks have significant amounts of dust around them. It is
evident that gas and dust can coexist around these relatively warm, relatively
young white dwarfs.Comment: 20 pages, including 4 figures. Accepted to Ap
Two Extrasolar Asteroids with Low Volatile-Element Mass Fractions
Using ultraviolet spectra obtained with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on
the Hubble Space Telescope, we extend our previous ground-based optical
determinations of the composition of the extrasolar asteroids accreted onto two
white dwarfs, GD 40 and G241-6. Combining optical and ultraviolet spectra of
these stars with He-dominated atmospheres, 13 and 12 polluting elements are
confidently detected in GD 40 and G241-6, respectively. For the material
accreted onto GD 40, the volatile elements C and S are deficient by more than a
factor of 10 and N by at least a factor of 5 compared to their mass fractions
in primitive CI chondrites and approach what is inferred for bulk Earth. A
similar pattern is found for G241-6 except that S is undepleted. We have also
newly detected or placed meaningful upper limits for the amount of Cl, Al, P,
Ni and Cu in the accreted matter. Extending results from optical studies, the
mass fractions of refractory elements in the accreted parent bodies are similar
to what is measured for bulk Earth and chondrites. Thermal processing, perhaps
interior to a snow line, appears to be of central importance in determining the
elemental compositions of these particular extrasolar asteroids.Comment: 37 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables, ApJ, accepte
Cool Customers in the Stellar Graveyard I: Limits to Extrasolar Planets Around the White Dwarf G29-38
We present high contrast images of the hydrogen white dwarf G 29-38 taken in
the near infrared with the Hubble Space Telescope and the Gemini North
Telescope as part of a high contrast imaging search for substellar objects in
orbit around nearby white dwarfs.
We review the current limits on planetary companions for G29-38, the only
nearby white dwarf with an infrared excess due to a dust disk. We add our
recent observations to these limits to produce extremely tight constraints on
the types of possible companions that could be present. No objects 6
M are detected in our data at projected separations 12 AU, and no
objects 16 M are detected for separations from 3 to 12 AU, assuming
a total system age of 1 Gyr. Limits for companions at separations 3 AU come
from a combination of 2MASS photometry and previous studies of G29-38's
pulsations. Our imaging with Gemini cannot confirm a tentative claim for the
presence of a low mass brown dwarf. These observations demonstrate that a
careful combination of several techniques can probe nearby white dwarfs for
large planets and low mass brown dwarfs.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, Accepted to Ap
The androgen receptor and signal-transduction pathways in hormone-refractory prostate cancer. Part 2: androgen-receptor cofactors and bypass pathways
Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer related deaths in men from the western world. Treatment of prostate cancer has relied on androgen deprivation therapy for the past 50 years. Response rates are initially high (70-80%), however almost all patients develop androgen escape and subsequently die within 1-2 years. Unlike breast cancer, alternative approaches (chemotherapy and radiotherapy) do not increase survival time. The high rate of prostate cancer mortality is therefore strongly linked to both development of androgen escape and the lack of alternate therapies. AR mutations and amplifications can not explain all cases of androgen escape and post-translational modification of the AR has become an alternative theory. However recently it has been suggested that AR co-activators e.g. SRC-1 or pathways the bypass the AR (Ras/MAP kinase or PI3K/Akt) may stimulated prostate cancer progression independent of the AR. This review will focus on how AR coactivators may act to increase AR transactivation during sub-optimal DHT concentrations and
also how signal transduction pathways may promote androgen escape via activation of transcription factors, e.g. AP-1, c-Myc and Myb, that induce cell proliferation or inhibit apoptosis
The WIRED Survey. III. An Infrared Excess around the Eclipsing Post-common Envelope Binary SDSS J030308.35+005443.7
We present the discovery with WISE of a significant infrared excess associated with the eclipsing post-common envelope binary SDSS J030308.35+005443.7, the first excess discovered around a non-interacting white dwarf+main-sequence M dwarf binary. The spectral energy distribution of the white dwarf+M dwarf companion shows significant excess longward of 3 μm. A T_(eff) of 8940 K for the white dwarf is consistent with a cooling age >2 Gyr, implying that the excess may be due to a recently formed circumbinary dust disk of material that extends from the tidal truncation radius of the binary at 1.96 R_☉ out to <0.8 AU, with a total mass of ~10^(20) g. We also construct WISE and follow-up ground-based near-infrared light curves of the system and find variability in the K band that appears to be in phase with ellipsoidal variations observed in the visible. The presence of dust might be due to (1) material being generated by the destruction of small rocky bodies that are being perturbed by an unseen planetary system or (2) dust condensing from the companion's wind. The high inclination of this system and the presence of dust make it an attractive target for M dwarf transit surveys and long-term photometric monitoring
Five Debris Disks Newly Revealed in Scattered Light from the HST NICMOS Archive
We have spatially resolved five debris disks (HD 30447, HD 35841, HD 141943,
HD 191089, and HD 202917) for the first time in near-infrared scattered light
by reanalyzing archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/NICMOS coronagraphic
images obtained between 1999 and 2006. One of these disks (HD 202917) was
previously resolved at visible wavelengths using HST/Advanced Camera for
Surveys. To obtain these new disk images, we performed advanced point-spread
function subtraction based on the Karhunen-Loeve Image Projection (KLIP)
algorithm on recently reprocessed NICMOS data with improved detector artifact
removal (Legacy Archive PSF Library And Circumstellar Environments Legacy
program). Three of the disks (HD 30447, HD 35841, and HD 141943) appear
edge-on, while the other two (HD 191089 and HD 202917) appear inclined. The
inclined disks have been sculpted into rings; in particular, the disk around HD
202917 exhibits strong asymmetries. All five host stars are young (8-40 Myr),
nearby (40-100 pc) F and G stars, and one (HD 141943) is a close analog to the
young sun during the epoch of terrestrial planet formation. Our discoveries
increase the number of debris disks resolved in scattered light from 19 to 23
(a 21% increase). Given their youth, proximity, and brightness (V = 7.2 to
8.5), these targets are excellent candidates for follow-up investigations of
planet formation at visible wavelengths using the HST/STIS coronagraph, at
near-infrared wavelengths with the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) and Very Large
Telescope (VLT)/SPHERE, and at thermal infrared wavelengths with the James Webb
Space Telescope NIRCam and MIRI coronagraphs.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
- …
