107 research outputs found

    New Extinction and Mass Estimates from Optical Photometry of the Very Low Mass Brown Dwarf Companion CT Chamaeleontis B with the Magellan AO System

    Get PDF
    We used the Magellan adaptive optics (MagAO) system and its VisAO CCD camera to image the young low mass brown dwarf companion CT Chamaeleontis B for the first time at visible wavelengths. We detect it at r', i', z', and Ys. With our new photometry and Teff~2500 K derived from the shape its K-band spectrum, we find that CT Cha B has Av = 3.4+/-1.1 mag, and a mass of 14-24 Mj according to the DUSTY evolutionary tracks and its 1-5 Myr age. The overluminosity of our r' detection indicates that the companion has significant Halpha emission and a mass accretion rate ~6*10^-10 Msun/yr, similar to some substellar companions. Proper motion analysis shows that another point source within 2" of CT Cha A is not physical. This paper demonstrates how visible wavelength AO photometry (r', i', z', Ys) allows for a better estimate of extinction, luminosity, and mass accretion rate of young substellar companions.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 6 figure

    New Extinction and Mass Estimates of the Low-mass Companion 1RXS 1609 B with the Magellan AO System: Evidence of an Inclined Dust Disk

    Get PDF
    We used the Magellan adaptive optics system to image the 11 Myr substellar companion 1RXS 1609 B at the bluest wavelengths to date (z' and Ys). Comparison with synthetic spectra yields a higher temperature than previous studies of Teff=2000±100KT_\mathrm{eff}=2000\pm100\mathrm{K} and significant dust extinction of AV=4.50.7+0.5A_V=4.5^{+0.5}_{-0.7} mag. Mass estimates based on the DUSTY tracks gives 0.012-0.015 Msun, making the companion likely a low-mass brown dwarf surrounded by a dusty disk. Our study suggests that 1RXS 1609 B is one of the 25% of Upper Scorpius low-mass members harboring disks, and it may have formed like a star and not a planet out at 320 AU.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; accepted to ApJ

    The First Circumstellar Disk Imaged in Silhouette with Adaptive Optics: MagAO Imaging of Orion 218-354

    Full text link
    We present high resolution adaptive optics (AO) corrected images of the silhouette disk Orion 218-354 taken with Magellan AO (MagAO) and its visible light camera, VisAO, in simultaneous differential imaging (SDI) mode at H-alpha. This is the first image of a circumstellar disk seen in silhouette with adaptive optics and is among the first visible light adaptive optics results in the literature. We derive the disk extent, geometry, intensity and extinction profiles and find, in contrast with previous work, that the disk is likely optically-thin at H-alpha. Our data provide an estimate of the column density in primitive, ISM-like grains as a function of radius in the disk. We estimate that only ~10% of the total sub-mm derived disk mass lies in primitive, unprocessed grains. We use our data, Monte Carlo radiative transfer modeling and previous results from the literature to make the first self-consistent multiwavelength model of Orion 218-354. We find that we are able to reproduce the 1-1000micron SED with a ~2-540AU disk of the size, geometry, small vs. large grain proportion and radial mass profile indicated by our data. This inner radius is a factor of ~15 larger than the sublimation radius of the disk, suggesting that it is likely cleared in the very interior.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, ApJL accepte

    Directly Imaged L-T Transition Exoplanets in the Mid-Infrared

    Full text link
    Gas-giant planets emit a large fraction of their light in the mid-infrared (\gtrsim3μ\mum), where photometry and spectroscopy are critical to our understanding of the bulk properties of extrasolar planets. Of particular importance are the L and M-band atmospheric windows (3-5μ\mum), which are the longest wavelengths currently accessible to ground-based, high-contrast imagers. We present binocular LBT AO images of the HR 8799 planetary system in six narrow-band filters from 3-4μ\mum, and a Magellan AO image of the 2M1207 planetary system in a broader 3.3μ\mum band. These systems encompass the five known exoplanets with luminosities consistent with L\rightarrowT transition brown dwarfs. Our results show that the exoplanets are brighter and have shallower spectral slopes than equivalent temperature brown dwarfs in a wavelength range that contains the methane fundamental absorption feature (spanned by the narrowband filters and encompassed by the broader 3.3μ\mum filter). For 2M1207 b, we find that thick clouds and non-equilibrium chemistry caused by vertical mixing can explain the object's appearance. For the HR 8799 planets, we present new models that suggest the atmospheres must have patchy clouds, along with non-equilibrium chemistry. Together, the presence of a heterogeneous surface and vertical mixing presents a picture of dynamic planetary atmospheres in which both horizontal and vertical motions influence the chemical and condensate profiles.Comment: Accepted to Ap

    New Spatially Resolved Observations of the T Cha Transition Disk and Constraints on the Previously Claimed Substellar Companion

    Get PDF
    We present multi-epoch non-redundant masking observations of the T Cha transition disk, taken at the VLT and Magellan in H, Ks, and L' bands. T Cha is one of a small number of transition disks that host companion candidates discovered by high-resolution imaging techniques, with a putative companion at a position angle of 78 degrees, separation of 62 mas, and contrast at L' of 5.1 mag. We find comparable binary parameters in our re-reduction of the initial detection images, and similar parameters in the 2011 L', 2013 NaCo L', and 2013 NaCo Ks data sets. We find a close-in companion signal in the 2012 NaCo L' dataset that cannot be explained by orbital motion, and a non-detection in the 2013 MagAO/Clio2 L' data. However, Monte-carlo simulations show that the best fits to the 2012 NaCo and 2013 MagAO/Clio2 followup data may be consistent with noise. There is also a significant probability of false non-detections in both of these data sets. We discuss physical scenarios that could cause the best fits, and argue that previous companion and scattering explanations are inconsistent with the results of the much larger dataset presented here.Comment: 25 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Magellan Adaptive Optics first-light observations of the exoplanet β\beta Pic b. I. Direct imaging in the far-red optical with MagAO+VisAO and in the near-IR with NICI

    Full text link
    We present the first ground-based CCD (λ<1μ\lambda < 1\mum) image of an extrasolar planet. Using MagAO's VisAO camera we detected the extrasolar giant planet (EGP) β\beta Pictoris b in YY-short (YSY_S, 0.985 μ\mum), at a separation of 0.470±0.0100.470 \pm 0.010'' and a contrast of (1.63±0.49)×105(1.63 \pm 0.49) \times 10^{-5}. This detection has a signal-to-noise ratio of 4.1, with an empirically estimated upper-limit on false alarm probability of 1.0%. We also present new photometry from the NICI instrument on the Gemini-South telescope, in CH4S,1%CH_{4S,1\%} (1.581.58 μm\mu m), KSK_S (2.18μm2.18\mu m), and KcontK_{cont} (2.27 μm\mu m). A thorough analysis of our photometry combined with previous measurements yields an estimated near-IR spectral type of L2.5±1.52.5\pm1.5, consistent with previous estimates. We estimate log(Lbol/LSun)(L_{bol}/L_{Sun}) = 3.86±0.04-3.86 \pm 0.04, which is consistent with prior estimates for β\beta Pic b and with field early-L brown dwarfs. This yields a hot-start mass estimate of 11.9±0.711.9 \pm 0.7 MJupM_{Jup} for an age of 21±421\pm4 Myr, with an upper limit below the deuterium burning mass. Our LbolL_{bol} based hot-start estimate for temperature is Teff=1643±32T_{eff}=1643\pm32 K (not including model dependent uncertainty). Due to the large corresponding model-derived radius of R=1.43±0.02R=1.43\pm0.02 RJupR_{Jup}, this TeffT_{eff} is \sim250250 K cooler than would be expected for a field L2.5 brown dwarf. Other young, low-gravity (large radius), ultracool dwarfs and directly-imaged EGPs also have lower effective temperatures than are implied by their spectral types. However, such objects tend to be anomalously red in the near-IR compared to field brown dwarfs. In contrast, β\beta Pic b has near-IR colors more typical of an early-L dwarf despite its lower inferred temperature.Comment: 40 pages, 20 figures. Accepted to Ap
    corecore