15,443 research outputs found
Molecule mapping of HR8799b using OSIRIS on Keck: Strong detection of water and carbon monoxide, but no methane
Context. In 2015, Barman et al. (ApJ, 804, 61) presented detections of
absorption from water, carbon monoxide, and methane in the atmosphere of the
directly imaged exoplanet HR8799b using integral field spectroscopy (IFS) with
OSIRIS on the Keck II telescope. We recently devised a new method to analyse
IFU data, called molecule mapping, searching for high-frequency signatures of
particular molecules in an IFU data cube.
Aims. The aim of this paper is to use the molecule mapping technique to
search for the previously detected spectral signatures in HR8799b using the
same data, allowing a comparison of molecule mapping with previous methods.
Methods. The medium-resolution H- and K-band pipeline-reduced archival data
were retrieved from the Keck archive facility. Telluric and stellar lines were
removed from each spectrum in the data cube, after which the residuals were
cross-correlated with model spectra of carbon monoxide, water, and methane.
Results. Both carbon monoxide and water are clearly detected at high
signal-to-noise, however, methane is not retrieved.
Conclusions. Molecule mapping works very well on the OSIRIS data of exoplanet
HR8799b. However, it is not evident why methane is detected in the original
analysis, but not with the molecule mapping technique. Possible causes could be
the presence of telluric residuals, different spectral filtering techniques, or
the use of different methane models. We do note that in the original analysis
methane was only detected in the K-band, while the H-band methane signal could
be expected to be comparably strong. More sensitive observations with the JWST
will be capable of confirming or disproving the presence of methane in this
planet at high confidence.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures and 2 tables, accepted by A&
Search for surface magnetic fields in Mira stars. First detection in chi Cyg
In order to complete the knowledge of the magnetic field and of its influence
during the transition from Asymptotic Giant Branch to Planetary Nebulae stages,
we have undertaken a search for magnetic fields at the surface of Mira stars.
We used spectropolarimetric observations, collected with the Narval instrument
at TBL, in order to detect - with Least Squares Deconvolution method - a Zeeman
signature in the visible part of the spectrum. We present the first
spectropolarimetric observations of the S-type Mira star chi Cyg, performed
around its maximum light. We have detected a polarimetric signal in the Stokes
V spectra and we have established its Zeeman origin. We claim that it is likely
to be related to a weak magnetic field present at the photospheric level and in
the lower part of the stellar atmosphere. We have estimated the strength of its
longitudinal component to about 2-3 Gauss. This result favors a 1/r law for the
variation of the magnetic field strength across the circumstellar envelope of
chi Cyg. This is the first detection of a weak magnetic field at the stellar
surface of a Mira star and we discuss its origin in the framework of shock
waves periodically propagating throughout the atmosphere of these radially
pulsating stars. At the date of our observations of chi Cyg, the shock wave
reaches its maximum intensity, and it is likely that the shock amplifies a weak
stellar magnetic field during its passage through the atmosphere. Without such
an amplification by the shock, the magnetic field strength would have been too
low to be detected. For the first time, we also report strong Stokes Q and U
signatures (linear polarization) centered onto the zero velocity (i.e., at the
shock front position). They seem to indicate that the radial direction would be
favored by the shock during its propagation throughout the atmosphere.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics (21
November 2013
Long-term magnetic field stability of Vega
We present new spectropolarimetric observations of the normal A-type star
Vega, obtained during the summer of 2010 with NARVAL at T\'elescope Bernard
Lyot (Pic du Midi Observatory). This new time-series is constituted of 615
spectra collected over 6 different nights. We use the
Least-Square-Deconvolution technique to compute, from each spectrum, a mean
line profile with a signal-to-noise ratio close to 20,000. After averaging all
615 polarized observations, we detect a circularly polarized Zeeman signature
consistent in shape and amplitude with the signatures previously reported from
our observations of 2008 and 2009. The surface magnetic geometry of the star,
reconstructed using the technique of Zeeman-Doppler Imaging, agrees with the
maps obtained in 2008 and 2009, showing that most recognizable features of the
photospheric field of Vega are only weakly distorted by large-scale surface
flows (differential rotation or meridional circulation).Comment: Proceedings of the conference "Stellar polarimetry: from birth to
death", 2011 Jun 27-30, Madiso
Wind Channeling, Magnetospheres, And Spindown Of Magnetic Massive Stars
A subpopulation (~10%) of hot, luminous, massive stars have been revealed through spectropolarimetry to harbor strong (hundreds to tens of thousand Gauss), steady, large-scale (often significantly dipolar) magnetic fields. This review focuses on the role of such fields in channeling and trapping the radiatively driven wind of massive stars, including both in the strongly perturbed outflow from open field regions, and the wind-fed “magnetospheres” that develop from closed magnetic loops. For B-type stars with weak winds and moderately fast rotation, one finds “centrifugal magnetospheres”, in which rotational support allows magnetically trapped wind to accumulate to a large density, with quite distinctive observational signatures, e.g. in Balmer line emission. In contrast, more luminous O-type stars have generally been spun down by magnetic braking from angular momentum loss in their much stronger winds. The lack of centrifugal support means their closed loops form a “dynamical magnetosphere”, with trapped material falling back to the star on a dynamical timescale; nonetheless, the much stronger wind feeding leads to a circumstellar density that is still high enough to give substantial Balmer emission. Overall, this review describes MHD simulations and semi-analytic dynamical methods for modeling the magnetospheres, the magnetically channeled wind outflows, and the associated spin-down of these magnetic massive stars
Magnetic topology and surface differential rotation on the K1 subgiant of the RS CVn system HR 1099
We present here spectropolarimetric observations of the RS CVn system HR 1099
(V711 Tau) secured from 1998 February to 2002 January with the
spectropolarimeter MuSiCoS at the Telescope Bernard Lyot (Observatoire du Pic
du Midi, France). We apply Zeeman-Doppler Imaging and reconstruct brightness
and magnetic surface topologies of the K1 primary subgiant of the system, at
five different epochs. We confirm the presence of large, axisymmetric regions
where the magnetic field is mainly azimuthal, providing further support to the
hypothesis that dynamo processes may be distributed throughout the whole
convective zone in this star. We study the short-term evolution of surface
structures from a comparison of our images with observations secured at
close-by epochs by Donati et al. (2003) at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. We
conclude that the small-scale brightness and magnetic patterns undergo major
changes within a timescale of 4 to 6 weeks, while the largest structures remain
stable over several years. We report the detection of a weak surface
differential rotation (both from brightness and magnetic tracers) indicating
that the equator rotates faster than the pole with a difference in rotation
rate between the pole and the equator about 4 times smaller than that of the
Sun. This result suggests that tidal forces also impact the global dynamic
equilibrium of convective zones in cool active stars.Comment: accepted by MNRA
- …
