12 research outputs found
The Parallax of VHS J1256-1257 from CFHT and Pan-STARRS 1
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Astronomical Society via the DOI in this recordWe present new parallax measurements from the CFHT Infrared Parallax Program and the Pan-STARRS 3π Steradian Survey for the young (≈150−300 Myr) triple system VHS J125601.92−125723.9. This system is composed of a nearly equal-flux binary ("AB") and a wide, possibly planetary-mass companion ("b"). The system's published parallactic distance (12.7±1.0 pc) implies absolute magnitudes unusually faint compared to known young objects and is in tension with the spectrophotometric distance for the central binary (17.2±2.6 pc). Our CFHT and Pan-STARRS parallaxes are consistent, and the more precise CFHT result places VHS J1256-1257 at 22.2+1.1−1.2 pc. Our new distance results in higher values for the companion's mass (19±5 MJup) and temperature (1240±50 K), and also brings the absolute magnitudes of all three components into better agreement with known young objects
WISE J072003.20-084651.2B is a massive T dwarf
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this recordWe present individual dynamical masses for the nearby M9.5+T5.5 binary WISE J072003.20084651.2AB, a.k.a. Scholz's star. Combining high-precision CFHT/WIRCam photocenter astrometry and Keck adaptive optics resolved imaging, we measure the first high-quality parallactic distance ( pc) and orbit ( yr period) for this system composed of a low-mass star and brown dwarf. We find a moderately eccentric orbit (), incompatible with previous work based on less data, and dynamical masses of and for the two components. The primary mass is marginally inconsistent (2.1) with the empirical massmagnitudemetallicity relation and models of main-sequence stars. The relatively high mass of the cold ( K) brown dwarf companion indicates an age older than a few Gyr, in accord with age estimates for the primary star, and is consistent with our recent estimate of 70 for the stellar/substellar boundary among the field population. Our improved parallax and proper motion, as well as an orbit-corrected system velocity, improve the accuracy of the system's close encounter with the solar system by an order of magnitude. WISE J07200846AB passed within kAU of the Sun kyr ago, passing through the outer Oort cloud where comets can have stable orbits
Formation, evolution and multiplicity of brown dwarfs and giant exoplanets
This proceeding summarises the talk of the awardee of the Spanish
Astronomical Society award to the the best Spanish thesis in Astronomy and
Astrophysics in the two-year period 2006-2007. The thesis required a tremendous
observational effort and covered many different topics related to brown dwarfs
and exoplanets, such as the study of the mass function in the substellar domain
of the young sigma Orionis cluster down to a few Jupiter masses, the relation
between the cluster stellar and substellar populations, the accretion discs in
cluster brown dwarfs, the frequency of very low-mass companions to nearby young
stars at intermediate and wide separations, or the detectability of Earth-like
planets in habitable zones around ultracool (L- and T-type) dwarfs in the solar
neighbourhood.Comment: "Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics V", Proceedings of the VIII
Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society (SEA) held in
Santander, 7-11 July, 2008. Edited by J. Gorgas, L. J. Goicoechea, J. I.
Gonzalez-Serrano, J. M. Diego. Invited oral contribution to plenary sessio
Recommended from our members
BRINGING "tHE MOTH" to LIGHT: A PLANET-SCULPTING SCENARIO for the HD 61005 DEBRIS DISK
The HD 61005 debris disk ("The Moth") stands out from the growing collection of spatially resolved circumstellar disks by virtue of its unusual swept-back morphology, brightness asymmetries, and dust ring offset. Despite several suggestions for the physical mechanisms creating these features, no definitive answer has been found. In this work, we demonstrate the plausibility of a scenario in which the disk material is shaped dynamically by an eccentric, inclined planet. We present new Keck NIRC2 scattered-light angular differential imaging of the disk at 1.2-2.3 μm that further constrains its outer morphology (projected separations of 27-135 au). We also present complementary Gemini Planet Imager 1.6 μm total intensity and polarized light detections that probe down to projected separations less than 10 au. To test our planet-sculpting hypothesis, we employed secular perturbation theory to construct parent body and dust distributions that informed scattered-light models. We found that this method produced models with morphological and photometric features similar to those seen in the data, supporting the premise of a planet-perturbed disk. Briefly, our results indicate a disk parent body population with a semimajor axis of 40-52 au and an interior planet with an eccentricity of at least 0.2. Many permutations of planet mass and semimajor axis are allowed, ranging from an Earth mass at 35 au to a Jupiter mass at 5 au
Fast-moving features in the debris disk around AU Microscopii
International audienceIn the 1980s, excess infrared emission was discovered around main-sequence stars; subsequent direct-imaging observations revealed orbiting disks of cold dust to be the source(1). These `debris disks' were thought to be by-products of planet formation because they often exhibited morphological and brightness asymmetries that may result from gravitational perturbation by planets. This was proved to be true for the beta Pictoris system, in which the known planet generates an observable warp in the disk(2-5). The nearby, young, unusually active late-type star AU Microscopii hosts a well-studied edge-on debris disk; earlier observations in the visible and near-infrared found asymmetric localized structures in the form of intensity variations along the midplane of the disk beyond a distance of 20 astronomical units(6-9). Here we report high-contrast imaging that reveals a series of five large-scale features in the southeast side of the disk, at projected separations of 10-60 astronomical units, persisting over intervals of 1-4 years. All these features appear to move away from the star at projected speeds of 4-10 kilometres per second, suggesting highly eccentric or unbound trajectories if they are associated with physical entities. The origin, localization, morphology and rapid evolution of these features are difficult to reconcile with current theories
