81 research outputs found
Demonstration of a Near-IR Laser Comb for Precision Radial Velocity Measurements in Astronomy
We describe a successful effort to produce a laser comb around 1.55 m in
the astronomical H band using a method based on a line-referenced,
electro-optical-modulation frequency comb. We discuss the experimental setup,
laboratory results, and proof of concept demonstrations at the NASA Infrared
Telescope Facility (IRTF) and the Keck-II telescope. The laser comb has a
demonstrated stability of 200 kHz, corresponding to a Doppler precision of
~0.3 m/s. This technology, when coupled with a high spectral resolution
spectrograph, offers the promise of 1 m/s radial velocity precision suitable
for the detection of Earth-sized planets in the habitable zones of cool M-type
stars
High Resolution Spectroscopy during Eclipse of the Young Substellar Eclipsing Binary 2MASS 0535-0546. I. Primary Spectrum: Cool Spots versus Opacity Uncertainties
We present high-resolution Keck optical spectra of the very young substellar
eclipsing binary 2MASS J05352184-0546085, obtained during eclipse of the
lower-mass (secondary) brown dwarf. The observations yield the spectrum of the
higher-mass (primary) brown dwarf alone, with negligible (~1.6%) contamination
by the secondary. We perform a simultaneous fine-analysis of the TiO-epsilon
band and the red lobe of the KI doublet, using state-of-the-art PHOENIX Dusty
and Cond synthetic spectra. Comparing the effective temperature and surface
gravity derived from these fits to the {\it empirically} determined surface
gravity of the primary (logg=3.5) then allows us to test the model spectra as
well as probe the prevailing photospheric conditions. We find that: (1) fits to
TiO-epsilon alone imply Teff=2500 \pm 50K; (2) at this Teff, fits to KI imply
logg=3.0, 0.5 dex lower than the true value; and (3) at the true logg, KI fits
yield Teff=2650 \pm 50K, ~150K higher than from TiO-epsilon alone. On the one
hand, these are the trends expected in the presence of cool spots covering a
large fraction of the primary's surface (as theorized previously to explain the
observed Teff reversal between the primary and secondary). Specifically, our
results can be reproduced by an unspotted stellar photosphere with Teff=2700K
and (empirical) logg=3.5, coupled with axisymmetric cool spots that are 15%
cooler (2300K), have an effective logg=3.0 (0.5 dex lower than photospheric),
and cover 70% of the surface. On the other hand, the trends in our analysis can
also be reproduced by model opacity errors: there are lacks in the synthetic
TiO-epsilon opacities, at least for higher-gravity field dwarfs. Stringently
discriminating between the two possibilities requires combining the present
results with an equivalent analysis of the secondary (predicted to be
relatively unspotted compared to the primary).Comment: To appear in ApJ. 11 pages, 5 figure
A Hot Gap Around Jupiter's Orbit in the Solar Nebula
The Sun was an order of magnitude more luminous during the first few hundred
thousand years of its existence, due in part to the gravitational energy
released by material accreting from the Solar nebula. If Jupiter was already
near its present mass, the planet's tides opened an optically-thin gap in the
nebula. We show using Monte Carlo radiative transfer calculations that sunlight
absorbed by the nebula and re-radiated into the gap raised temperatures well
above the sublimation threshold for water ice, with potentially drastic
consequences for the icy bodies in Jupiter's feeding zone. Bodies up to a meter
in size were vaporized within a single orbit if the planet was near its present
location during this early epoch. Dust particles lost their ice mantles, and
planetesimals were partially to fully devolatilized, depending on their size.
Scenarios in which Jupiter formed promptly, such as those involving a
gravitational instability of the massive early nebula, must cope with the high
temperatures. Enriching Jupiter in the noble gases through delivery trapped in
clathrate hydrates will be more difficult, but might be achieved by either
forming the planet much further from the star, or capturing planetesimals at
later epochs. The hot gap resulting from an early origin for Jupiter also would
affect the surface compositions of any primordial Trojan asteroids.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures. ApJ in press. Discussion of Jupiter's volatile
enrichment revised in sec. 4.
Demonstration of a near-IR line-referenced electro-optical laser frequency comb for precision radial velocity measurements in astronomy
An important technique for discovering and characterizing planets beyond our solar system relies upon measurement of weak Doppler shifts in the spectra of host stars induced by the influence of orbiting planets. A recent advance has been the introduction of optical frequency combs as frequency references. Frequency combs produce a series of equally spaced reference frequencies and they offer extreme accuracy and spectral grasp that can potentially revolutionize exoplanet detection. Here we demonstrate a laser frequency comb using an alternate comb generation method based on electro-optical modulation, with the comb centre wavelength stabilized to a molecular or atomic reference. In contrast to mode-locked combs, the line spacing is readily resolvable using typical astronomical grating spectrographs. Built using commercial off-the-shelf components, the instrument is relatively simple and reliable. Proof of concept experiments operated at near-infrared wavelengths were carried out at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility and the Keck-II telescope
The Structure of IR Luminous Galaxies at 100 Microns
We have observed twenty two galaxies at 100 microns with the Kuiper Airborne
Observatory in order to determine the size of their FIR emitting regions. Most
of these galaxies are luminous far-infrared sources, with L_FIR > 10^11 L_sun.
This data constitutes the highest spatial resolution ever achieved on luminous
galaxies in the far infrared. Our data includes direct measurements of the
spatial structure of the sources, in which we look for departures from point
source profiles. Additionally, comparison of our small beam 100 micron fluxes
with the large beam IRAS fluxes shows how much flux falls beyond our detectors
but within the IRAS beam. Several sources with point- like cores show evidence
for such a net flux deficit. We clearly resolved six of these galaxies at 100
microns and have some evidence for extension in seven others. Those galaxies
which we have resolved can have little of their 100 micron flux directly
emitted by a point-like active galactic nucleus (AGN). Dust heated to ~40 K by
recent bursts of non-nuclear star formation provides the best explanation for
their extreme FIR luminosity. In a few cases, heating of an extended region by
a compact central source is also a plausible option. Assuming the FIR emission
we see is from dust, we also use the sizes we derive to find the dust
temperatures and optical depths at 100 microns which we translate into an
effective visual extinction through the galaxy. Our work shows that studies of
the far infrared structure of luminous infrared galaxies is clearly within the
capabilities of new generation far infrared instrumentation, such as SOFIA and
SIRTF.Comment: 8 tables, 23 figure
The onset of X-ray emission in young stellar objects: a Chandra observation of the Serpens star-forming region
AIMS: To study the properties of X-ray emissions from young stellar objects
(YSOs), through their evolution from Class I to Class III and determine whether
Class 0 protostars emit in X-rays. METHODS: A deep Chandra X-ray observation of
the Serpens star-forming region was obtained. The Serpens Cloud Core is ideally
suited for this type of investigation, being populated by a dense and extremely
young cluster whose members are found in all different evolutionary stages,
including six well studied Class 0 sources. RESULTS: None of the six Class 0
protostars is detected in our observations, excluding the presence of sources
with X-ray luminosities > 0.4 10^30 erg/s (for column densities of the order of
4 10^{23} cm^-2, or A_V ~ 200). A total of 85 X-ray sources are detected and
the light curves and spectra of 35 YSOs are derived. There is a clear trend of
decreasing absorbing column densities as one moves from Class I to Class III
sources, and, possibly, evidence of decreasing plasma temperatures, too. We
observe a strong, long-duration, flare from a Class II low-mass star, for which
we derive a flaring loop length of the order of 20 stellar radii. We interpret
the flaring event as originating from a magnetic flux tube connecting the star
to its circumstellar disk. The presence of such a disk is supported by the
detection, in the spectrum of this star, of 6.4 keV Fe fluorescent emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Searching for Exoplanets Using a Microresonator Astrocomb
Detection of weak radial velocity shifts of host stars induced by orbiting
planets is an important technique for discovering and characterizing planets
beyond our solar system. Optical frequency combs enable calibration of stellar
radial velocity shifts at levels required for detection of Earth analogs. A new
chip-based device, the Kerr soliton microcomb, has properties ideal for
ubiquitous application outside the lab and even in future space-borne
instruments. Moreover, microcomb spectra are ideally suited for astronomical
spectrograph calibration and eliminate filtering steps required by conventional
mode-locked-laser frequency combs. Here, for the calibration of astronomical
spectrographs, we demonstrate an atomic/molecular line-referenced,
near-infrared soliton microcomb. Efforts to search for the known exoplanet HD
187123b were conducted at the Keck-II telescope as a first in-the-field
demonstration of microcombs
High resolution spectroscopy of Ne II emission from young stellar objects
Constraining the spatial and thermal structure of the gaseous component of
circumstellar disks is crucial to understand star and planet formation. Models
predict that the [Ne II] line at 12.81 {\mu}m detected in young stellar objects
with Spitzer traces disk gas and its response to high energy radiation, but
such [Ne II] emission may also originate in shocks within powerful outflows. To
distinguish between these potential origins for mid-infrared [Ne II] emission
and to constrain disk models, we observed 32 young stellar objects using the
high resolution (R~30000) mid-infrared spectrograph VISIR at the VLT. We
detected the 12.81 {\mu}m [Ne II] line in 12 objects, tripling the number of
detections of this line in young stellar objects with high spatial and spectral
resolution spectrographs. We obtain the following main results: a) In Class I
objects the [Ne II] emission observed from Spitzer is mainly due to gas at a
distance of more than 20-40 AU from the star, where neon is, most likely,
ionized by shocks due to protostellar outflows. b) In transition and
pre-transition disks, most of the emission is confined to the inner disk,
within 20-40 AU from the central star. c) Detailed analysis of line profiles
indicates that, in transition and pre-transition disks, the line is slightly
blue-shifted (2-12 km s{^-1}) with respect to the stellar velocity, and the
line width is directly correlated with the disk inclination, as expected if the
emission is due to a disk wind. d) Models of EUV/X-ray irradiated disks
reproduce well the observed relation between the line width and the disk
inclination, but underestimate the blue-shift of the line.Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication on Ap
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