2,583 results on '"Ishii, M"'
Search Results
2. Alagille-like syndrome with surprising karyotype: a case report
- Author
-
Amimoto, S., Ishii, M., Tanaka, K., Araki, S., Kuwamura, M., Suga, S., Kondo, E., Shibata, E., Kusuhara, K., and Yoshino, K.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Influences of test conditions of sandblasting on replicability of abrasion pattern of concrete subjected to hydrodynamic action
- Author
-
Ueno, K., Takahashi, S., Yamamoto, M., Kanamori, T., Kawabe, S., Nakajima, I., and Ishii, M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Orbital characterization of GJ1108A system, and comparison of dynamical mass with model-derived mass for resolved binaries
- Author
-
Mizuki, T., Kuzuhara, M., Mede, K., Schlieder, J. E., Janson, M., Brandt, T. D., Hirano, T., Narita, N., Wisniewski, J., Yamada, T., Biller, B., Bonnefoy, M., Carson, J. C., McElwain, M. W., Matsuo, T., Turner, E. L., Mayama, S., Akiyama, E., Uyama, T., Nakagawa, T., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Hashimoto, J., Abe, L., Brander, W., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S. S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kwon, J., Miyama, S., Morino, J., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y. H., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Watanabe, M., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report an orbital characterization of GJ1108Aab that is a low-mass binary system in pre-main-sequence phase. Via the combination of astrometry using adaptive optics and radial velocity measurements, an eccentric orbital solution of $e$=0.63 is obtained, which might be induced by the Kozai-Lidov mechanism with a widely separated GJ1108B system. Combined with several observed properties, we confirm the system is indeed young. Columba is the most probable moving group, to which the GJ1108A system belongs, although its membership to the group has not been established. If the age of Columba is assumed for GJ1108A, the dynamical masses of both GJ1108Aa and GJ1108Ab ($M_{\rm dynamical,GJ1108Aa}=0.72\pm0.04 M_{\odot}$ and $M_{\rm dynamical,GJ1108Ab}=0.30\pm0.03 M_{\odot}$) are more massive than what an evolutionary model predicts based on the age and luminosities. We consider the discrepancy in mass comparison can attribute to an age uncertainty; the system is likely older than stars in Columba, and effects that are not implemented in classical models such as accretion history and magnetic activity are not preferred to explain the mass discrepancy. We also discuss the performance of the evolutionary model by compiling similar low-mass objects in evolutionary state based on the literature. Consequently, it is suggested that the current model on average reproduces the mass of resolved low-mass binaries without any significant offsets., Comment: Accepted in ApJ
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Solar Flare Prediction Model with Three Machine-Learning Algorithms Using Ultraviolet Brightening and Vector Magnetogram
- Author
-
Nishizuka, N., Sugiura, K., Kubo, Y., Den, M., Watari, S., and Ishii, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We developed a flare prediction model using machine learning, which is optimized to predict the maximum class of flares occurring in the following 24 h. Machine learning is used to devise algorithms that can learn from and make decisions on a huge amount of data. We used solar observation data during the period 2010-2015, such as vector magnetogram, ultraviolet (UV) emission, and soft X-ray emission taken by the Solar Dynamics Observatory and the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite. We detected active regions from the full-disk magnetogram, from which 60 features were extracted with their time differentials, including magnetic neutral lines, the current helicity, the UV brightening, and the flare history. After standardizing the feature database, we fully shuffled and randomly separated it into two for training and testing. To investigate which algorithm is best for flare prediction, we compared three machine learning algorithms: the support vector machine (SVM), k-nearest neighbors (k-NN), and extremely randomized trees (ERT). The prediction score, the true skill statistic (TSS), was higher than 0.9 with a fully shuffled dataset, which is higher than that for human forecasts. It was found that k-NN has the highest performance among the three algorithms. The ranking of the feature importance showed that the previous flare activity is most effective, followed by the length of magnetic neutral lines, the unsigned magnetic flux, the area of UV brightening, and the time differentials of features over 24 h, all of which are strongly correlated with the flux emergence dynamics in an active region., Comment: 27 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Development of Rheumatoid Arthritis in Cavitary Mycobacterium avium Pulmonary Disease: A Case Report of Successful Treatment with CTLA4-Ig (Abatacept)
- Author
-
Tanaka H, Asakura T, Kikuchi J, Ishii M, Namkoong H, Kaneko Y, Fukunaga K, and Hasegawa N
- Subjects
rheumatoid arthritis ,nontuberculous mycobacterial infection ,cavitary lesion ,biological agent ,bronchiectasis ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Hiromu Tanaka,1 Takanori Asakura,1 Jun Kikuchi,2 Makoto Ishii,1 Ho Namkoong,3 Yuko Kaneko,2 Koichi Fukunaga,1 Naoki Hasegawa3 1Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan; 2Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan; 3Department of Infectious Diseases, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, JapanCorrespondence: Takanori AsakuraDivision of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, 35 Shinanomachi, Shinjuku, Tokyo, 160-8582, JapanTel +81-3-3353-1211Fax +81-3-3353-2502Email takanori.asakura@keio.jpBackground: Nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease (NTM-PD) often develops in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), especially during immunosuppressive treatment, including biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. NTM-PD is associated with airway lesions such as bronchiectasis, which is frequently seen in RA patients. Distinguishing which diseases cause the pulmonary lesion is difficult. However, there are limited reports of the development of RA during the follow-up of NTM-PD and how biological agents should be administered in these conditions, especially with cavitary lesions.Case Presentation: A 62-year-old woman with hemosputum was referred to our hospital, where she was diagnosed with Mycobacterium avium pulmonary disease. She began treatment with several antibiotics, including clarithromycin, ethambutol, rifampicin, and amikacin. In the course of treatment, M. avium became macrolide-resistant. Five years after beginning antibiotic treatment, she felt arthralgia in the fingers and wrists and had a high titer of rheumatoid factor and anticitrullinated peptide antibody, with which we diagnosed RA. Methotrexate, prednisolone, and iguratimod were subsequently administered, but the activity of RA gradually worsened. Meanwhile, M. avium changed to a macrolide-susceptible strain, her sputum smear results remained almost negative, and the NTM-PD disease was well controlled with antimicrobial therapy, despite her having cavitary lesions. Therefore, we started using CTLA4-Ig (abatacept). RA symptoms were substantially ameliorated. The pulmonary lesions and NTM-PD worsened mildly, but her pulmonary symptoms were stable.Conclusion: Physicians should be mindful of the etiologies of bronchiectasis, including RA, even in patients with a long-term history of treatment for bronchiectasis and NTM-PD. When NTM-PD is well controlled, even with remaining cavitary lesions, abatacept may be an option for patients with RA based on a comprehensive assessment of disease progression using NTM sputum smear/culture, computed tomography findings, and treatment response.Keywords: rheumatoid arthritis, nontuberculous mycobacterial infection, cavitary lesion, biological agent, bronchiectasis
- Published
- 2022
7. Coupling of Surface Ocean Heat and Carbon Perturbations over the Subtropical Cells under Twenty-First Century Climate Change
- Author
-
Rodgers, K. B., Ishii, M., Frölicher, T. L., Schlunegger, S., Aumont, O., Toyama, K., and Slater, R. D.
- Published
- 2020
8. A Case of IgA Vasculitis During Nivolumab Therapy for Renal Cell Carcinoma
- Author
-
Nagaoka-Takatori A, Ishii M, Hayama K, Obinata D, Yamaguchi K, Takahashi S, and Fujita H
- Subjects
immune checkpoint inhibitors ,leukocytoclastic vasculitis ,pd-1 ,purpura ,Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Asami Nagaoka-Takatori,1 Madoka Ishii,1 Koremasa Hayama,1 Daisuke Obinata,2 Kenya Yamaguchi,2 Satoru Takahashi,2 Hideki Fujita1 1Division of Cutaneous Science, Department of Dermatology, Nihon University School of Medicine, Tokyo, 173-8610, Japan; 2Department of Urology, Nihon University School of Medicine, Tokyo, 173-8610, JapanCorrespondence: Hideki FujitaDivision of Cutaneous Science, Department of Dermatology, Nihon University School of Medicine, 30-1 Oyaguchi-Kamicho, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo, 173-8610, JapanTel +81-3-3972-8111 (ext. 2502)Fax +81-3-5995-9841Email fujita.hideki@nihon-u.ac.jpAbstract: A 50-year-old Japanese woman presented with a 4-day history of multiple purpura on her extremities and myalgia. She had been receiving nivolumab therapy for stage IV renal cell carcinoma for 18 months. Nivolumab was temporarily discontinued due to liver dysfunction and resumed 3 months before. Biopsy specimen revealed leukocytoclastic vasculitis, and direct immunofluorescence showed deposition of IgA and C3 in the vessel walls of the upper dermis. Based on these findings, a diagnosis of IgA vasculitis was made. She was treated with 20 mg/day of oral prednisolone, which resulted in the complete disappearance of purpura and myalgia. Although the patient needed temporary cessation of nivolumab therapy, she experienced no recurrence of purpura or myalgia, and the dose of prednisolone was gradually tapered to 5 mg/day. Although nivolumab can lead to various immune-related adverse events, vasculitis is rare. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second case of IgA vasculitis during nivolumab therapy.Keywords: immune checkpoint inhibitors, leukocytoclastic vasculitis, PD-1, purpura
- Published
- 2021
9. SCExAO and GPI $YJH$ Band Photometry and Integral Field Spectroscopy of the Young Brown Dwarf Companion to HD 1160
- Author
-
Garcia, Eugenio V., Currie, Thayne, Guyon, Olivier, Stassun, Keivan, Jovanovic, Nemanja, Lozi, Julien, Kudo, Tomoyuki, Doughty, Danielle, Schlieder, Joshua, Kwon, J., Uyama, T., Kuzuhara, M., Carson, J., Nakagawa, T., Hashimoto, J., Kusakabe, N., Abe, L., Brander, W., Brandt, T. D., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M., Miyama, S., Morino, J. I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y. H., Takami, H., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J., Yamada, T., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high signal-to-noise ratio, precise $YJH$ photometry and $Y$ band (\gpiwave~$\mu$m) spectroscopy of HD 1160 B, a young substellar companion discovered from the Gemini NICI Planet Finding Campaign, using the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics instrument and the Gemini Planet Imager. HD 1160 B has typical mid-M dwarf-like infrared colors and a spectral type of M5.5$^{+1.0}_{-0.5}$, where the blue edge of our $Y$ band spectrum rules out earlier spectral types. Atmospheric modeling suggests HD 1160 B having an effective temperature of 3000--3100 $K$, a surface gravity of log $g$ = 4--4.5, a radius of~\bestfitradius~$R_{\rm J}$, and a luminosity of log $L$/$L_{\odot} = -2.76 \pm 0.05$. Neither the primary's Hertzspring-Russell diagram position nor atmospheric modeling of HD 1160 B show evidence for a sub-solar metallicity. The interpretation of the HD 1160 B depends on which stellar system components are used to estimate an age. Considering HD 1160 A, B and C jointly, we derive an age of 80--125 Myr, implying that HD 1160 B straddles the hydrogen-burning limit (70--90 $M_{\rm J}$). If we consider HD 1160 A alone, younger ages (20--125 Myr) and a brown dwarf-like mass (35--90 $M_{\rm J}$) are possible. Interferometric measurements of the primary, a precise GAIA parallax, and moderate resolution spectroscopy can better constrain the system's age and how HD 1160 B fits within the context of (sub)stellar evolution., Comment: 50 pages, 6 Tables, 13 Figures; Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. SEEDS direct imaging of the RV-detected companion to V450 Andromedae, and characterization of the system
- Author
-
Hełminiak, K. G., Kuzuhara, M., Mede, K., Brandt, T. D., Kandori, R., Suenaga, T., Kusakabe, N., Narita, N., Carson, J. C., Currie, T., Kudo, T., Hashimoto, J., Abe, L., Akiyama, E., Brandner, W., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S. S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Knapp, G. R., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Ryu, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y. H., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the direct imaging detection of a low-mass companion to a young, moderately active star V450 And, that was previously identified with the radial velocity method. The companion was found in high-contrast images obtained with the Subaru Telescope equipped with the HiCIAO camera and AO188 adaptive optics system. From the public ELODIE and SOPHIE archives we extracted available high-resolution spectra and radial velocity (RV) measurements, along with RVs from the Lick planet search program. We combined our multi-epoch astrometry with these archival, partially unpublished RVs, and found that the companion is a low-mass star, not a brown dwarf, as previously suggested. We found the best-fitting dynamical masses to be $m_1=1.141_{-0.091}^{+0.037}$ and $m_2=0.279^{+0.023}_{-0.020}$ M$_\odot$. We also performed spectral analysis of the SOPHIE spectra with the iSpec code. The Hipparcos time-series photometry shows a periodicity of $P=5.743$ d, which is also seen in SOPHIE spectra as an RV modulation of the star A. We interpret it as being caused by spots on the stellar surface, and the star to be rotating with the given period. From the rotation and level of activity, we found that the system is $380^{+220}_{-100}$ Myr old, consistent with an isochrone analysis ($220^{+2120}_{-90}$ Myr). This work may serve as a test case for future studies of low-mass stars, brown dwarfs and exoplanets by combination of RV and direct imaging data., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 7 tables, to appear in ApJ
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Spiral Structure and Differential Dust Size Distribution in the LkHa 330 Disk
- Author
-
Akiyama, E., Hashimoto, J., Liu, H. B., Li, J. I -H., Bonnefoy, M., Dong, R., Hasegawa, Y., Henning, T., Sitko, M. L., Janson, M., Feldt, M., Wisniewski, J., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Tsukagoshi, T., Momose, M., Muto, T., Taki, T., Kuzuhara, M., Mayama, S., Takami, M., Ohashi, N., Grady, C. A., Kwon, J., Thalmann, C., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Brandt, T. D., Carson, J. C., Egner, S., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S. S., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Knapp, G. R., Kandori, R., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y. H., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Dust trapping accelerates the coagulation of dust particles, and thus it represents an initial step toward the formation of planetesimals. We report $H$-band (1.6 um) linear polarimetric observations and 0.87 mm interferometric continuum observations toward a transitional disk around LkHa 330. As results, a pair of spiral arms were detected in the $H$-band emission and an asymmetric (potentially arm-like) structure was detected in the 0.87 mm continuum emission. We discuss the origin of the spiral arm and the asymmetric structure, and suggest that a massive unseen planet is the most plausible explanation. The possibility of dust trapping and grain growth causing the asymmetric structure was also investigated through the opacity index (beta) by plotting the observed SED slope between 0.87 mm from our SMA observation and 1.3 mm from literature. The results imply that grains are indistinguishable from ISM-like dust in the east side ($beta = 2.0 pm 0.5$), but much smaller in the west side $beta = 0.7^{+0.5}_{-0.4}$, indicating differential dust size distribution between the two sides of the disk. Combining the results of near-infrared and submillimeter observations, we conjecture that the spiral arms exist at the upper surface and an asymmetric structure resides in the disk interior. Future observations at centimeter wavelengths and differential polarization imaging in other bands (Y to K) with extreme AO imagers are required to understand how large dust grains form and to further explore the dust distribution in the disk., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, AJ accepted for publication
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Polarimetry and flux distribution in the debris disk around HD 32297
- Author
-
Asensio-Torres, R., Janson, M., Hashimoto, J., Thalmann, C., Currie, T., Buenzli, E., Kudo, T., Kuzuhara, M., Kusakabe, N., Abe, L., Akiyama, E., Brandner, W., Brandt, T. D., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M., Mayama, S., Miyama, S., Morino, J., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Turner, E., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-contrast angular differential imaging (ADI) observations of the debris disk around HD 32297 in H-band, as well as the first polarimetric images for this system in polarized differential imaging (PDI) mode with Subaru/HICIAO. In ADI, we detect the nearly edge-on disk at >5sigma levels from ~0.45 arcsec to ~1.7 arcsec (50-192 AU) from the star and recover the spine deviation from the midplane already found in previous works. We also find for the first time imaging and surface brightness (SB) indications for the presence of a gapped structure on both sides of the disk at distances of ~0.75 arcsec (NE side) and ~0.65 arcsec (SW side). Global forward-modelling work delivers a best-fit model disk and well-fitting parameter intervals that essentially match previous results, with high-forward scattering grains and a ring located at 110 AU. However, this single ring model cannot account for the gapped structure seen in our SB profiles. We create simple double ring models and achieve a satisfactory fit with two rings located at 60 and 95 AU, respectively, low-forward scattering grains and very sharp inner slopes. In polarized light we retrieve the disk extending from ~0.25-1.6 arcsec, although the central region is quite noisy and high S/N are only found in the range ~0.75-1.2 arcsec. The disk is polarized in the azimuthal direction, as expected, and the departure from the midplane is also clearly observed. Evidence for a gapped scenario is not found in the PDI data. We obtain a linear polarization degree of the grains that increases from ~10% at 0.55 arcsec to ~25% at 1.6 arcsec. The maximum is found at scattering angles of ~90degrees, either from the main components of the disk or from dust grains blown out to larger radii., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Indicators of Global Climate Change 2023: annual update of key indicators of the state of the climate system and human influence
- Author
-
Forster, P. M., Smith, C., Walsh, T., Lamb, W., Lamboll, R., Hall, B., Hauser, M., Ribes, A., Rosen, D., Gillett, N., Palmer, M. D., Rogelj, J., von Schuckmann, K., Trewin, B., Allen, M., Andrew, R., Betts, R., Boyer, T., Buontempo, C., Burgess, S., Cagnazzo, C., Cheng, L., Friedlingstein, P., Gettelman, A., Gütschow, J., Ishii, M., Jenkins, S., Lan, X., Morice, C., Mühle, J., Kadow, C., Kennedy, J., Killick, R., Krummel, P. B., Minx, J. C., Myhre, G., Naik, V., Peters, G. P., Pirani, A., Pongratz, J., Schleussner, C.-F., Seneviratne, S. I., Szopa, S., Thorne, P., Kovilakam, M. V. M., Majamäki, E., Jalkanen, J.-P., van Marle, M., Hoesly, R. M., Rohde, R., Schumacher, D., van der Werf, G., Vose, R., Zickfeld, K., Zhang, X., Masson-Delmotte, V., Zhai, P., Forster, P. M., Smith, C., Walsh, T., Lamb, W., Lamboll, R., Hall, B., Hauser, M., Ribes, A., Rosen, D., Gillett, N., Palmer, M. D., Rogelj, J., von Schuckmann, K., Trewin, B., Allen, M., Andrew, R., Betts, R., Boyer, T., Buontempo, C., Burgess, S., Cagnazzo, C., Cheng, L., Friedlingstein, P., Gettelman, A., Gütschow, J., Ishii, M., Jenkins, S., Lan, X., Morice, C., Mühle, J., Kadow, C., Kennedy, J., Killick, R., Krummel, P. B., Minx, J. C., Myhre, G., Naik, V., Peters, G. P., Pirani, A., Pongratz, J., Schleussner, C.-F., Seneviratne, S. I., Szopa, S., Thorne, P., Kovilakam, M. V. M., Majamäki, E., Jalkanen, J.-P., van Marle, M., Hoesly, R. M., Rohde, R., Schumacher, D., van der Werf, G., Vose, R., Zickfeld, K., Zhang, X., Masson-Delmotte, V., and Zhai, P.
- Abstract
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments are the trusted source of scientific evidence for climate negotiations taking place under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Evidence-based decision-making needs to be informed by up-to-date and timely information on key indicators of the state of the climate system and of the human influence on the global climate system. However, successive IPCC reports are published at intervals of 5–10 years, creating potential for an information gap between report cycles. We follow methods as close as possible to those used in the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) Working Group One (WGI) report. We compile monitoring datasets to produce estimates for key climate indicators related to forcing of the climate system: emissions of greenhouse gases and short-lived climate forcers, greenhouse gas concentrations, radiative forcing, the Earth's energy imbalance, surface temperature changes, warming attributed to human activities, the remaining carbon budget, and estimates of global temperature extremes. The purpose of this effort, grounded in an open data, open science approach, is to make annually updated reliable global climate indicators available in the public domain (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11064126, Smith et al., 2024a). As they are traceable to IPCC report methods, they can be trusted by all parties involved in UNFCCC negotiations and help convey wider understanding of the latest knowledge of the climate system and its direction of travel. The indicators show that, for the 2014–2023 decade average, observed warming was 1.19 [1.06 to 1.30] °C, of which 1.19 [1.0 to 1.4] °C was human-induced. For the single year average, human-induced warming reached 1.31 [1.1 to 1.7] °C in 2023 relative to 1850–1900. This is below the 2023 observed record of 1.43 [1.32 to 1.53] °C, indicating a substantial contribution of internal variability in the 2023 record. Human-induced warming has been incr
- Published
- 2024
14. The Structure of Pre-transitional Protoplanetary Disks. II. Azimuthal Asymmetries, Different Radial Distributions of Large and Small Dust Grains in PDS~70
- Author
-
Hashimoto, J., Tsukagoshi, T., Brown, J. M., Dong, R., Muto, Mr. Takayuki, Zhu, Dr. Zhaohuan, Wisniewski, Dr. John P., Ohashi, N., kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Abe, L., Akiyama, E., Brandner, Wolfgang, Brandt, T., Carson, J., Currie, Dr. Thayne, Egner, S., Feldt, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, Thomas, Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, Dr. Masanori, Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G., Kuzuhara, M., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Mayama, S., Mede, K., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, Dr. Gene, Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, Dr. Christian, Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The formation scenario of a gapped disk, i.e., transitional disk, and its asymmetry is still under debate. Proposed scenarios such as disk-planet interaction, photoevaporation, grain growth, anticyclonic vortex, eccentricity, and their combinations would result in different radial distributions of the gas and the small (sub-$\mu$m size) and large (millimeter size) dust grains as well as asymmetric structures in a disk. Optical/near-infrared (NIR) imaging observations and (sub-)millimeter interferometry can trace small and large dust grains, respectively; therefore multi-wavelength observations could help elucidate the origin of complicated structures of a disk. Here we report SMA observations of the dust continuum at 1.3~mm and $^{12}$CO~$J=2\rightarrow1$ line emission of the pre-transitional protoplanetary disk around the solar-mass star PDS~70. PDS~70, a weak-lined T Tauri star, exhibits a gap in the scattered light from its disk with a radius of $\sim$65~AU at NIR wavelengths. However, we found a larger gap in the disk with a radius of $\sim$80~AU at 1.3~mm. Emission from all three disk components (the gas and the small and large dust grains) in images exhibits a deficit in brightness in the central region of the disk, in particular, the dust-disk in small and large dust grains has asymmetric brightness. The contrast ratio of the flux density in the dust continuum between the peak position to the opposite side of the disk reaches 1.4. We suggest the asymmetries and different gap-radii of the disk around PDS~70 are potentially formed by several (unseen) accreting planets inducing dust filtration., Comment: Accepted by ApJ
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Impact of Increased Horizontal Resolution of an Ocean Model on Carbon Circulation in the North Pacific Ocean
- Author
-
Tsujino, H., primary, Nakano, H., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Urakawa, L. S., additional, Toyama, K., additional, Kosugi, N., additional, Kitamura, Y., additional, Ishii, M., additional, Nishikawa, S., additional, Nishikawa, H., additional, Sugiyama, T., additional, and Ishikawa, Y., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Attributing historical changes in probabilities of record-breaking daily temperature and precipitation extreme events
- Author
-
Shiogama, H, Imada, Y, Mori, M, Mizuta, R, Stone, D, Yoshida, K, Arakawa, O, Ikeda, M, Takahashi, C, Arai, M, Ishii, M, Watanabe, M, and Kimoto, M
- Subjects
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
© 2016, the Meteorological Society of Japan. We describe two unprecedented large (100-member), longterm (61-year) ensembles based on MRI-AGCM3.2, which were driven by historical and non-warming climate forcing. These ensembles comprise the "Database for Policy Decision making for Future climate change (d4PDF)". We compare these ensembles to large ensembles based on another climate model, as well as to observed data, to investigate the influence of anthropogenic activities on historical changes in the numbers of record-breaking events, including: the annual coldest daily minimum temperature (TNn), the annual warmest daily maximum temperature (TXx) and the annual most intense daily precipitation event (Rx1day). These two climate model ensembles indicate that human activity has already had statistically significant impacts on the number of record-breaking extreme events worldwide mainly in the Northern Hemisphere land. Specifically, human activities have altered the likelihood that a wider area globally would suffer record-breaking TNn, TXx and Rx1day events than that observed over the 2001- 2010 period by a factor of at least 0.6, 5.4 and 1.3, respectively. However, we also find that the estimated spatial patterns and amplitudes of anthropogenic impacts on the probabilities of record-breaking events are sensitive to the climate model and/or natural-world boundary conditions used in the attribution studies.
- Published
- 2016
17. EP11.03-32 Dose the Histological Subtype of NSCC-NOS Affect the Efficacy of 1st-Line PD-1/PD-L1 Inhibitors with or without Chemotherapy?
- Author
-
Hirano, T., primary, Morise, M., additional, Hori, S., additional, Hashimoto, T., additional, Ozone, S., additional, Koyama, J., additional, Tanaka, I., additional, Sato, M., additional, Kimura, T., additional, Kondoh, Y., additional, and Ishii, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A Statistical Analysis of SEEDS and Other High-Contrast Exoplanet Surveys: Massive Planets or Low-Mass Brown Dwarfs?
- Author
-
Brandt, Timothy D., McElwain, Michael W., Turner, Edwin L., Mede, Kyle, Spiegel, David S., Kuzuhara, Masayuki, Schlieder, Joshua E., Wisniewski, John P., Abe, L., Biller, B., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Currie, T., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Golota, T., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Inutsuka, S., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martín, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We conduct a statistical analysis of a combined sample of direct imaging data, totalling nearly 250 stars. The stars cover a wide range of ages and spectral types, and include five detections ($\kappa$ And b, two $\sim$60 M$_{\rm J}$ brown dwarf companions in the Pleiades, PZ Tel B, and CD$-$35 2722B). For some analyses we add a currently unpublished set of SEEDS observations, including the detections GJ 504b and GJ 758B. We conduct a uniform, Bayesian analysis of all stellar ages using both membership in a kinematic moving group and activity/rotation age indicators. We then present a new statistical method for computing the likelihood of a substellar distribution function. By performing most of the integrals analytically, we achieve an enormous speedup over brute-force Monte Carlo. We use this method to place upper limits on the maximum semimajor axis of the distribution function derived from radial-velocity planets, finding model-dependent values of $\sim$30--100 AU. Finally, we model the entire substellar sample, from massive brown dwarfs to a theoretically motivated cutoff at $\sim$5 M$_{\rm Jup}$, with a single power law distribution. We find that $p(M, a) \propto M^{-0.65\pm0.60} a^{-0.85\pm0.39}$ (1$\sigma$ errors) provides an adequate fit to our data, with 1.0--3.1\% (68\% confidence) of stars hosting 5--70 $M_{\rm Jup}$ companions between 10 and 100 AU. This suggests that many of the directly imaged exoplanets known, including most (if not all) of the low-mass companions in our sample, formed by fragmentation in a cloud or disk, and represent the low-mass tail of the brown dwarfs., Comment: ApJ in press, replaced with accepted version. Methodology clarified, conclusions mostly unchanged
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Direct Imaging Detection of Methane in the Atmosphere of GJ 504 b
- Author
-
Janson, M., Brandt, T., Kuzuhara, M., Spiegel, D., Thalmann, C., Currie, T., Bonnefoy, M., Zimmerman, N., Sorahana, S., Kotani, T., Schlieder, J., Hashimoto, J., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M., Mede, K., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nakagawa, T., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Most exoplanets detected by direct imaging so far have been characterized by relatively hot (> ~1000 K) and cloudy atmospheres. A surprising feature in some of their atmospheres has been a distinct lack of methane, possibly implying non-equilibrium chemistry. Recently, we reported the discovery of a planetary companion to the Sun-like star GJ 504 using Subaru/HiCIAO within the SEEDS survey. The planet is substantially colder (<600 K) than previously imaged planets, and has indications of fewer clouds, which implies that it represents a new class of planetary atmospheres with expected similarities to late T-type brown dwarfs in the same temperature range. If so, one might also expect the presence of significant methane absorption, which is characteristic of such objects. Here, we report the detection of deep methane absorption in the atmosphere of GJ 504 b, using the Spectral Differential Imaging mode of HiCIAO to distinguish the absorption feature around 1.6 um. We also report updated JHK photometry based on new Ks-band data and a re-analysis of the existing data. The results support the notion that GJ 504 b has atmospheric properties distinct from other imaged exoplanets, and will become a useful reference object for future planets in the same temperature range., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Characterization of the gaseous companion {\kappa} Andromedae b: New Keck and LBTI high-contrast observations
- Author
-
Bonnefoy, M., Currie, T., Marleau, G. -D., Schlieder, J. E., Wisniewski, J., Carson, J., Covey, K. R., Henning, T., Biller, B., Hinz, P., Klahr, H., Boyer, A. N. Marsh, Zimmerman, N., Janson, M., McElwain, M., Mordasini, C., Skemer, A., Bailey, V., Defrère, D., Thalmann, C., Skrutskie, M., Allard, F., Homeier, D., Tamura, M., Feldt, M., Cumming, A., Grady, C., Brandner, W., Kandori, R., Kuzuhara, M., Fukagawa, M., Kwon, J., Kudo, T., Hashimoto, J., Kusakabe, N., Abe, L., Brandt, T., Egner, S., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Knapp, G., Matsuo, T., Mede, K., Miyama, M., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., and Usuda, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We previously reported the direct detection of a low mass companion at a projected separation of 55+-2 AU around the B9 type star {\kappa} Andromedae. The properties of the system (mass ratio, separation) make it a benchmark for the understanding of the formation and evolution of gas giant planets and brown dwarfs on wide-orbits. We present new angular differential imaging (ADI) images of the Kappa Andromedae system at 2.146 (Ks), 3.776 (L'), 4.052 (NB 4.05) and 4.78 {\mu}m (M') obtained with Keck/NIRC2 and LBTI/LMIRCam, as well as more accurate near-infrared photometry of the star with the MIMIR instrument. We derive a more accurate J = 15.86 +- 0.21, H = 14.95 +- 0.13, Ks = 14.32 +- 0.09 mag for {\kappa} And b. We redetect the companion in all our high contrast observations. We confirm previous contrasts obtained at Ks and L' band. We derive NB 4.05 = 13.0 +- 0.2 and M' = 13.3 +- 0.3 mag and estimate Log10(L/Lsun) = -3.76 +- 0.06. We build the 1-5 microns spectral energy distribution of the companion and compare it to seven PHOENIX-based atmospheric models in order to derive Teff = 1900+100-200 K. Models do not set constrains on the surface gravity. ``Hot-start" evolutionary models predict masses of 14+25-2 MJup based on the luminosity and temperature estimates, and considering a conservative age range for the system (30+120-10 Myr). ``warm-start" evolutionary tracks constrain the mass to M >= 11 MJup. Therefore, the mass of {\kappa} Andromedae b mostly falls in the brown-dwarf regime, due to remaining uncertainties in age and mass-luminosity models. According to the formation models, disk instability in a primordial disk could account for the position and a wide range of plausible masses of {\kappa} And b., Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics on August 6, 2013
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Direct Imaging of a Cold Jovian Exoplanet in Orbit around the Sun-like Star GJ 504
- Author
-
Kuzuhara, M., Tamura, M., Kudo, T., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Brandt, T. D., Thalmann, C., Spiegel, D., Biller, B., Carson, J., Hori, Y., Suzuki, R., Burrows, A., Henning, T., Turner, E. L., McElwain, M. W., Moro-Martin, A., Suenaga, T., Takahashi, Y. H., Kwon, J., Lucas, P., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Fujiwara, H., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S. S., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Knapp, G. R., Matsuo, T., Mayama, S., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Nishikawa, J., Nishimura, T., Kotani, T., Kusakabe, N., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J. P., Yamada, T., Takami, H., and Usuda, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Several exoplanets have recently been imaged at wide separations of >10 AU from their parent stars. These span a limited range of ages (<50 Myr) and atmospheric properties, with temperatures of 800--1800 K and very red colors (J - H > 0.5 mag), implying thick cloud covers. Furthermore, substantial model uncertainties exist at these young ages due to the unknown initial conditions at formation, which can lead to an order of magnitude of uncertainty in the modeled planet mass. Here, we report the direct imaging discovery of a Jovian exoplanet around the Sun-like star GJ 504, detected as part of the SEEDS survey. The system is older than all other known directly-imaged planets; as a result, its estimated mass remains in the planetary regime independent of uncertainties related to choices of initial conditions in the exoplanet modeling. Using the most common exoplanet cooling model, and given the system age of 160 [+350, -60] Myr, GJ 504 b has an estimated mass of 4 [+4.5, -1.0] Jupiter masses, among the lowest of directly imaged planets. Its projected separation of 43.5 AU exceeds the typical outer boundary of ~30 AU predicted for the core accretion mechanism. GJ 504 b is also significantly cooler (510 [+30, -20] K) and has a bluer color (J-H = -0.23 mag) than previously imaged exoplanets, suggesting a largely cloud-free atmosphere accessible to spectroscopic characterization. Thus, it has the potential of providing novel insights into the origins of giant planets, as well as their atmospheric properties., Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ. Minor updates from the version 1
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Moving Group Targets of the SEEDS High-Contrast Imaging Survey of Exoplanets and Disks: Results and Observations from the First Three Years
- Author
-
Brandt, Timothy D., Kuzuhara, Masayuki, McElwain, Michael W., Schlieder, Joshua E., Wisniewski, John P., Turner, Edwin L., Carson, J., Matsuo, T., Biller, B., Bonnefoy, M., Dressing, C., Janson, M., Knapp, G. R., Moro-Martín, A., Thalmann, C., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Hashimoto, J., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Currie, T., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Golota, T., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Kwon, J., Mede, K., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suenaga, T., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takahashi, Y., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from the first three years of observations of moving group targets in the SEEDS high-contrast imaging survey of exoplanets and disks using the Subaru telescope. We achieve typical contrasts of ~10^5 at 1" and ~10^6 beyond 2" around 63 proposed members of nearby kinematic moving groups. We review each of the kinematic associations to which our targets belong, concluding that five, \beta Pictoris (~20 Myr), AB Doradus (~100 Myr), Columba (~30 Myr), Tucana-Horogium (~30 Myr), TW Hydrae (~10 Myr), are sufficiently well-defined to constrain the ages of individual targets. Somewhat less than half of our targets are high-probability members of one of these moving groups. For all of our targets, we combine proposed moving group membership with other age indicators where available, including Ca II HK emission, X-ray activity, and rotation period, to produce a posterior probability distribution of age. SEEDS observations discovered a substellar companion to one of our targets, \kappa And, a late B star. We do not detect any other substellar companions, but do find seven new close binary systems, of which one still needs to be confirmed. A detailed analysis of the statistics of this sample, and of the companion mass constraints given our age probability distributions and exoplanet cooling models, will be presented in a forthcoming paper., Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, 6 tables. Replaced with published ApJ version
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Seventy six T dwarfs from the UKIDSS LAS: benchmarks, kinematics and an updated space density
- Author
-
Burningham, Ben, Cardoso, C. V., Smith, L., Leggett, S. K., Smart, R. L., Mann, A. W., Dhital, S., Lucas, P. W., Tinney, C. G., Pinfield, D. J., Zhang, Z., Morley, C., Saumon, D., Aller, K., Littlefair, S. P., Homeier, D., Lodieu, N., Deacon, N., Marley, M. S., van Spaandonk, L., Baker, D., Allard, F., Andrei, A. H., Canty, J., Clarke, J., Day-Jones, A. C., Dupuy, T., Fortney, J. J., Gomes, J., Ishii, M., Jones, H. R. A., Liu, M., Magazzu, A., Marocco, F., Murray, D. N., Rojas-Ayala, B., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of 76 new T dwarfs from the UKIDSS Large Area Survey (LAS). Near-infrared broad and narrow-band photometry and spectroscopy are presented for the new objects, along with WISE and warm-Spitzer photometry. Proper motions for 128 UKIDSS T dwarfs are presented from a new two epoch LAS proper motion catalogue. We use these motions to identify two new benchmark systems: LHS 6176AB, a T8+M4 pair and HD118865AB, a T5.5+F8 pair. Using age constraints from the primaries and evolutionary models to constrain the radii we have estimated their physical properties from their bolometric luminosity. We compare the colours and properties of known benchmark T dwarfs to the latest model atmospheres and draw two principal conclusions. Firstly, it appears that the H - [4.5] and J - W2 colours are more sensitive to metallicity than has previously been recognised, such that differences in metallicity may dominate over differences in Teff when considering relative properties of cool objects using these colours. Secondly, the previously noted apparent dominance of young objects in the late-T dwarf sample is no longer apparent when using the new model grids and the expanded sample of late-T dwarfs and benchmarks. This is supported by the apparently similar distribution of late-T dwarfs and earlier-type T dwarfs on reduced proper motion diagrams that we present. Finally, we present updated space densities for the late-T dwarfs, and compare our values to simulation predictions and those from WISE., Comment: MNRAS accepted. Updated 9th May 2013 to correct error in column headings for Table 4
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Imaging Discovery of the Debris Disk Around HIP 79977
- Author
-
Thalmann, C., Janson, M., Buenzli, E., Brandt, T. D., Wisniewski, J. P., Dominik, C., Carson, J., McElwain, M. W., Currie, T., Knapp, G. R., Moro-Martín, A., Usuda, T., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Golota, T., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., Mayama, S., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Subaru/HiCIAO H-band high-contrast images of the debris disk around HIP 79977, whose pres- ence was recently inferred from an infrared excess. Our images resolve the disk for the first time, allowing characterization of its shape, size, and dust grain properties. We use angular differential imaging (ADI) to reveal the disk geometry in unpolarized light out to a radius of ~2", as well as polarized differential imaging (PDI) to measure the degree of scattering polarization out to ~1.5". In order to strike a favorable balance between suppression of the stellar halo and conservation of disk flux, we explore the application of principal component analysis (PCA) to both ADI and reference star subtraction. This allows accurate forward modeling of the effects of data reduction on simulated disk images, and thus direct comparison with the imaged disk. The resulting best-fit values and well-fitting intervals for the model parameters are a surface brightness power-law slope of S_out = -3.2 [-3.6,-2.9], an inclination of i = 84{\deg} [81{\deg},86{\deg}], a high Henyey-Greenstein forward-scattering parameter of g = 0.45 [0.35, 0.60], and a non-significant disk-star offset of u = 3.0 [-1.5, 7.5] AU = 24 [-13, 61] mas along the line of nodes. Furthermore, the tangential linear polarization along the disk rises from ~10% at 0.5" to ~45% at 1.5". These measurements paint a consistent picture of a disk of dust grains produced by collisional cascades and blown out to larger radii by stellar radiation pressure., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Spiral Arms in the Asymmetrically Illuminated Disk of MWC 758 and Constraints on Giant Planets
- Author
-
Grady, C. A., Muto, T., Hashimoto, J., Fukagawa, M., Currie, T., Biller, B., Thalmann, C., Sitko, M. L., Russell, R., Wisniewski, J., Dong, R., Kwon, J., Sai, S., Hornbeck, J., Schneider, G., Hines, D., Moro-Martin, A., Feldt, M., Henning, Th., Pott, J. -U., Bonnefoy, M., Bouwman, J., Lacour, S., Mueller, A., Juhasz, A., Crida, A., Chauvin, G., Andrews, S., Wilner, D., Kraus, A., Dahm, S., Robitaille, T., Jang-Condell, H., Abe, L., Akiyama, E., Brandner, W., Brandt, T., Carson, J., Egner, S., Follette, K. B., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Mayama, S., McElwain, M., Matsuo, T., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, G., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first near-IR scattered light detection of the transitional disk associated with the Herbig Ae star MWC 758 using data obtained as part of the Strategic Exploration of Exoplanets and Disks with Subaru, and 1.1 micron HST/NICMOS data. While sub-millimeter studies suggested there is a dust-depleted cavity with r=0.35, we find scattered light as close as 0.1 (20-28 AU) from the star, with no visible cavity at H, K', or Ks. We find two small-scaled spiral structures which asymmetrically shadow the outer disk. We model one of the spirals using spiral density wave theory, and derive a disk aspect ratio of h ~ 0.18, indicating a dynamically warm disk. If the spiral pattern is excited by a perturber, we estimate its mass to be 5+3,-4 Mj, in the range where planet filtration models predict accretion continuing onto the star. Using a combination of non-redundant aperture masking data at L' and angular differential imaging with Locally Optimized Combination of Images at K' and Ks, we exclude stellar or massive brown dwarf companions within 300 mas of the Herbig Ae star, and all but planetary mass companions exterior to 0.5. We reach 5-sigma contrasts limiting companions to planetary masses, 3-4 MJ at 1.0 and 2 MJ at 1.55 using the COND models. Collectively, these data strengthen the case for MWC 758 already being a young planetary system., Comment: 45 pages, 9 figures; ApJ in press
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Direct Imaging Discovery of a `Super-Jupiter' Around the late B-Type Star Kappa And
- Author
-
Carson, J., Thalmann, C., Janson, M., Kozakis, T., Bonnefoy, M., Biller, B., Schlieder, J., Currie, T., McElwain, M., Goto, M., Henning, T., Brandner, W., Feldt, M., Kandori, R., Kuzuhara, M., Stevens, L., Wong, P., Gainey, K., Fukagawa, M., Kuwada, Y., Brandt, T., Kwon, J., Abe, L., Egner, S., Grady, C., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Hodapp, K., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Knapp, G., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Matsuo, T., Miyama, S., Morino, J., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Turner, E., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the direct imaging discovery of an extrasolar planet, or possible low-mass brown dwarf, at a projected separation of 55 +/- 2 AU (1.058 +/- 0.007 arcsec) from the B9-type star Kappa And. The planet was detected with Subaru/HiCIAO during the SEEDS survey, and confirmed as a bound companion via common proper motion measurements. Observed near-infrared magnitudes of J = 16.3 +/- 0.3, H = 15.2 +/- 0.2, Ks = 14.6 +/- 0.4, and L' = 13.12 +/- 0.09 indicate a temperature of ~1700 K. The galactic kinematics of the host star are consistent with membership in the Columba association, implying a corresponding age of 30 +20 -10 Myr. The system age, combined with the companion photometry, points to a model-dependent companion mass ~12.8 MJup. The host star's estimated mass of 2.4-2.5 Msun places it among the most massive stars ever known to harbor an extrasolar planet or low-mass brown dwarf. While the mass of the companion is close to the deuterium burning limit, its mass ratio, orbital separation, and likely planet-like formation scenario imply that it may be best defined as a `Super-Jupiter' with properties similar to other recently discovered companions to massive stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. 25 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Subaru Imaging of Asymmetric Features in a Transitional Disk in Upper Scorpius
- Author
-
Mayama, S., Hashimoto, J., Muto, T., Tsukagoshi, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Takahashi, Y., Kudo, T., Dong, R., Fukagawa, M., Takami, M., Momose, M., Wisniewski, J. P., Follette, K., Abe, L., Akiyama, E., Brandner, W., Brandt, T., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Kwon, J., Knapp, G. R., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We report high-resolution (0.07 arcsec) near-infrared polarized intensity images of the circumstellar disk around the star 2MASS J16042165-2130284 obtained with HiCIAO mounted on the Subaru 8.2 m telescope. We present our $H$-band data, which clearly exhibits a resolved, face-on disk with a large inner hole for the first time at infrared wavelengths. We detect the centrosymmetric polarization pattern in the circumstellar material as has been observed in other disks. Elliptical fitting gives the semimajor axis, semiminor axis, and position angle (P.A.) of the disk as 63 AU, 62 AU, and -14 $^{\circ}$, respectively. The disk is asymmetric, with one dip located at P.A.s of $\sim85^{\circ}$. Our observed disk size agrees well with a previous study of dust and CO emission at submillimeter wavelength with Submillimeter Array. Hence, the near-infrared light is interpreted as scattered light reflected from the inner edge of the disk. Our observations also detect an elongated arc (50 AU) extending over the disk inner hole. It emanates at the inner edge of the western side of the disk, extending inward first, then curving to the northeast. We discuss the possibility that the inner hole, the dip, and the arc that we have observed may be related to the existence of unseen bodies within the disk., Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, published 2012 November 7 by ApJL, typo corrected
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Structure of Pre-transitional Protoplanetary Disks I: Radiative Transfer Modeling of the Disk+Cavity in the PDS 70 system
- Author
-
Dong, Ruobing, Hashimoto, Jun, Rafikov, Roman, Zhu, Zhaohuan, Whitney, Barbara, Kudo, Tomoyuki, Muto, Takayuki, Brandt, Timothy, McClure, Melissa K., Wisniewski, John, Abe, L., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Grady, C., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, G., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Turner, E., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Through detailed radiative transfer modeling, we present a disk+cavity model to simultaneously explain both the SED and Subaru H-band polarized light imaging for the pre-transitional protoplanetary disk PDS 70. Particularly, we are able to match not only the radial dependence, but also the absolute scale, of the surface brightness of the scattered light. Our disk model has a cavity 65 AU in radius, which is heavily depleted of sub-micron-sized dust grains, and a small residual inner disk which produces a weak but still optically thick NIR excess in the SED. To explain the contrast of the cavity edge in the Subaru image, a factor of ~1000 depletion for the sub-micron-sized dust inside the cavity is required. The total dust mass of the disk may be on the order of 1e-4 M_sun, only weakly constrained due to the lack of long wavelength observations and the uncertainties in the dust model. The scale height of the sub-micron-sized dust is ~6 AU at the cavity edge, and the cavity wall is optically thick in the vertical direction at H-band. PDS 70 is not a member of the class of (pre-)transitional disks identified by Dong et al. (2012), whose members only show evidence of the cavity in the millimeter-sized dust but not the sub-micron-sized dust in resolved images. The two classes of (pre-)transitional disks may form through different mechanisms, or they may just be at different evolution stages in the disk clearing process., Comment: 28 pages (single column), 7 figures, 1 table, ApJ accepted
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. New Techniques for High-Contrast Imaging with ADI: the ACORNS-ADI SEEDS Data Reduction Pipeline
- Author
-
Brandt, Timothy D., McElwain, Michael W., Turner, Edwin L., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Golota, T., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Kwon, J., Matsuo, T., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J. P., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe Algorithms for Calibration, Optimized Registration, and Nulling the Star in Angular Differential Imaging (ACORNS-ADI), a new, parallelized software package to reduce high-contrast imaging data, and its application to data from the SEEDS survey. We implement several new algorithms, including a method to register saturated images, a trimmed mean for combining an image sequence that reduces noise by up to ~20%, and a robust and computationally fast method to compute the sensitivity of a high-contrast observation everywhere on the field-of-view without introducing artificial sources. We also include a description of image processing steps to remove electronic artifacts specific to Hawaii2-RG detectors like the one used for SEEDS, and a detailed analysis of the Locally Optimized Combination of Images (LOCI) algorithm commonly used to reduce high-contrast imaging data. ACORNS-ADI is written in python. It is efficient and open-source, and includes several optional features which may improve performance on data from other instruments. ACORNS-ADI requires minimal modification to reduce data from instruments other than HiCIAO. It is freely available for download at www.github.com/t-brandt/acorns-adi under a BSD license., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted to ApJ. Replaced with accepted version; mostly minor changes. Software updated
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. High-Resolution Near-Infrared Polarimetry of a Circumstellar Disk around UX Tau A
- Author
-
Tanii, Ryoko, Itoh, Yoichi, Kudo, Tomoyuki, Hioki, Tomonori, Oasa, Yumiko, Gupta, Ranjan, Sen, A. K., Wisniewski, J. P., Muto, T., Grady, C. A., Hashimoto, J., Fukagawa, M., Mayama, S., Hornbeck, J., Sitko, M., Russell, R., Werren, C., Cure, M., Currie, T., Ohashi, N., Okamoto, Y., Momose, M., Honda, M., Inutsuka, S. -I., Takeuchi, T., Dong, R., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Brandt, T., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Fukue, T., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S. S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. P., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, G., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present H-band polarimetric imagery of UX Tau A taken with HiCIAO/AO188 on the Subaru Telescope. UX Tau A has been classified as a pre-transitional disk object, with a gap structure separating its inner and outer disks. Our imagery taken with the 0.15 (21 AU) radius coronagraphic mask has revealed a strongly polarized circumstellar disk surrounding UX Tau A which extends to 120 AU, at a spatial resolution of 0.1 (14 AU). It is inclined by 46 \pm 2 degree as the west side is nearest. Although SED modeling and sub-millimeter imagery suggested the presence of a gap in the disk, with the inner edge of the outer disk estimated to be located at 25 - 30 AU, we detect no evidence of a gap at the limit of our inner working angle (23 AU) at the near-infrared wavelength. We attribute the observed strong polarization (up to 66 %) to light scattering by dust grains in the disk. However, neither polarization models of the circumstellar disk based on Rayleigh scattering nor Mie scattering approximations were consistent with the observed azimuthal profile of the polarization degrees of the disk. Instead, a geometric optics model of the disk with nonspherical grains with the radii of 30 micron meter is consistent with the observed profile. We suggest that the dust grains have experienced frequent collisional coagulations and have grown in the circumstellar disk of UX Tau A., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, and 1 table. accepted to PASJ
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. High-Contrast NIR Polarization Imaging of MWC480
- Author
-
Kusakabe, N., Grady, C. A., Sitko, M. L., Hashimoto, J., Kudo, T., Fukagawa, M., Muto, T., Wisniewski, J. P., Min, M., Mayama, S., Werren, C., Day, A. N., Beerman, L. C., Lynch, D. K., Russell, R. W., Brafford, S. M., Kuzuhara, M., Brandt, T. D., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S. S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
One of the key predictions of modeling from the IR excess of Herbig Ae stars is that for protoplanetary disks, where significant grain growth and settling has occurred, the dust disk has flattened to the point that it can be partially or largely shadowed by the innermost material at or near the dust sublimation radius. When the self-shadowing has already started, the outer disk is expected to be detected in scattered light only in the exceptional cases that the scale height of the dust disk at the sublimation radius is smaller than usual. High-contrast imaging combined with the IR spectral energy distribution allow us to measure the degree of flattening of the disk, as well as to determine the properties of the outer disk. We present polarimetric differential imaging in $H$ band obtained with Subaru/HiCIAO of one such system, MWC 480. The HiCIAO data were obtained at a historic minimum of the NIR excess. The disk is detected in scattered light from 0\farcs2-1\farcs0 (27.4-137AU). Together with the marginal detection of the disk from 1998 February 24 by HST/NICMOS, our data constrain the opening half angle for the disk to lie between 1.3$\leq\theta\leq 2.2^\circ$. When compared with similar measures in CO for the gas disk from the literature, the dust disk subtends only $\sim$30% of the gas disk scale height (H/R$\sim$0.03). Such a dust disk is a factor of 5-7 flatter than transitional disks, which have structural signatures that giant planets have formed., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, ApJ accepted 2012-05-06
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The missing cavities in the SEEDS polarized scattered light images of transitional protoplanetary disks: a generic disk model
- Author
-
Dong, R., Rafikov, R., Zhu, Z., Hartmann, L., Whitney, B., Brandt, T., Muto, T., Hashimoto, J., Grady, C., Follette, K., Kuzuhara, M., Tanii, R., Itoh, Y., Thalmann, C., Wisniewski, J., Mayama, S., Janson, M., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Honda, M., Inutsuka, S., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Matsuo, T., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Transitional circumstellar disks around young stellar objects have a distinctive infrared deficit around 10 microns in their Spectral Energy Distributions (SED), recently measured by the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS), suggesting dust depletion in the inner regions. These disks have been confirmed to have giant central cavities by imaging of the submillimeter (sub-mm) continuum emission using the Submillimeter Array (SMA). However, the polarized near-infrared scattered light images for most objects in a systematic IRS/SMA cross sample, obtained by HiCIAO on the Subaru telescope, show no evidence for the cavity, in clear contrast with SMA and Spitzer observations. Radiative transfer modeling indicates that many of these scattered light images are consistent with a smooth spatial distribution for micron-sized grains, with little discontinuity in the surface density of the micron-sized grains at the cavity edge. Here we present a generic disk model that can simultaneously account for the general features in IRS, SMA, and Subaru observations. Particularly, the scattered light images for this model are computed, which agree with the general trend seen in Subaru data. Decoupling between the spatial distributions of the micron-sized dust and mm-sized dust inside the cavity is suggested by the model, which, if confirmed, necessitates a mechanism, such as dust filtration, for differentiating the small and big dust in the cavity clearing process. Our model also suggests an inwardly increasing gas-to-dust-ratio in the inner disk, and different spatial distributions for the small dust inside and outside the cavity, echoing the predictions in grain coagulation and growth models., Comment: 41 pages (single column), 1 table, 10 figures, ApJ accepted
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Discovery of Small-Scale Spiral Structures in the Disk of SAO 206462 (HD 135344B): Implications for the Physical State of the Disk from Spiral Density Wave Theory
- Author
-
Muto, T., Grady, C. A., Hashimoto, J., Fukagawa, M., Hornbeck, J. B., Sitko, M., Russell, R., Werren, C., Cure, M., Currie, T., Ohashi, N., Okamoto, Y., Momose, M., Honda, M., Inutsuka, S., Takeuchi, T., Dong, R., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Brandt, T., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Fukue, T., Goto, M., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Janson, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Matsuo, T., Mayama, S., McElwain, M. W., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Wisniewski, J. P., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-resolution, H-band, imaging observations, collected with Subaru/HiCIAO, of the scattered light from the transitional disk around SAO 206462 (HD 135344B). Although previous sub-mm imagery suggested the existence of the dust-depleted cavity at r~46AU, our observations reveal the presence of scattered light components as close as 0.2" (~28AU) from the star. Moreover, we have discovered two small-scale spiral structures lying within 0.5" (~70AU). We present models for the spiral structures using the spiral density wave theory, and derive a disk aspect ratio of h~0.1, which is consistent with previous sub-mm observations. This model can potentially give estimates of the temperature and rotation profiles of the disk based on dynamical processes, independently from sub-mm observations. It also predicts the evolution of the spiral structures, which can be observable on timescales of 10-20 years, providing conclusive tests of the model. While we cannot uniquely identify the origin of these spirals, planets embedded in the disk may be capable of exciting the observed morphology. Assuming that this is the case, we can make predictions on the locations and, possibly, the masses of the unseen planets. Such planets may be detected by future multi-wavelengths observations., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, ApJL in press, typo corrected
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Images of the Extended Outer Regions of the Debris Ring Around HR 4796 A
- Author
-
Thalmann, C., Janson, M., Buenzli, E., Brandt, T. D., Wisniewski, J. P., Moro-Martín, A., Usuda, T., Schneider, G., Carson, J., McElwain, M. W., Grady, C. A., Goto, M., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Dominik, C., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Fukue, T., Golota, T., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Matsuo, T., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takahashi, Y. H., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-contrast images of HR 4796 A taken with Subaru/HiCIAO in H-band, resolving the debris disk in scattered light. The application of specialized angular differential imaging methods (ADI) allows us to trace the inner edge of the disk with high precision, and reveals a pair of "streamers" extending radially outwards from the ansae. Using a simple disk model with a power-law surface brightness profile, we demonstrate that the observed streamers can be understood as part of the smoothly tapered outer boundary of the debris disk, which is most visible at the ansae. Our observations are consistent with the expected result of a narrow planetesimal ring being ground up in a collisional cascade, yielding dust with a wide range of grain sizes. Radiation forces leave large grains in the ring and push smaller grains onto elliptical, or even hyperbolic trajectories. We measure and characterize the disk's surface brightness profile, and confirm the previously suspected offset of the disk's center from the star's position along the ring's major axis. Furthermore, we present first evidence for an offset along the minor axis. Such offsets are commonly viewed as signposts for the presence of unseen planets within a disk's cavity. Our images also offer new constraints on the presence of companions down to the planetary mass regime (~9 Jupiter masses at 0.5", ~3 Jupiter masses at 1")., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The properties of the T8.5p dwarf Ross 458C
- Author
-
Burningham, Ben, Leggett, S. K., Homeier, D., Saumon, D., Lucas, P. W., Pinfield, D. J., Tinney, C. G., Allard, F., Marley, M. S., Jones, H. R. A., Murray, D. N., Ishii, M., Day-Jones, A. C., Gomes, J., and Zhang, Z. H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present near-infrared photometry and spectroscopy, and warm-Spitzer IRAC photometry of the young very cool T dwarf Ross 458C, which we have typed as T8.5p. By applying the fiducial age constraints (< 1Gyr) imposed by the properties of the active M dwarf Ross 458A, we have used these data to determine that Ross 458C has Teff = 695 \pm 60K, log g = 4.0 - 4.7 and an inferred mass of 5-20 MJup. We have compared fits of the near-infrared spectrum and IRAC photometry to the BT Settl and Saumon & Marley model grids, and have found that both sets provide best fits that are consistent with our derived properties, whilst the former provide a marginally closer match to the data for all scenarios explored here. The main difference between the model grids arises in the 4.5{\mu}m region, where the BT Settl models are able to better predict the flux through the IRAC filter, suggesting that non-equilibrium effects on the CO-CO2 ratio are important for shaping the mid-infrared spectra of very cool T dwarfs. We have also revisited the issue of dust opacity in the spectra of Ross 458C that was raised by Burgasser et al (2010). We have found that the BT Settl models which also incorporate a condensate cloud model, provide a better match to the near-infrared spectrum of this target than the Saumon & Marley model with fsed = 2, and we briefly discuss the influence of condensate clouds on T dwarf spectra., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. V2 corrected typos in author names
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Direct Imaging of Fine Structures in Giant Planet Forming Regions of the Protoplanetary Disk around AB Aurigae
- Author
-
Hashimoto, J., Tamura, M., Muto, T., Kudo, T., Fukagawa, M., Fukue, T., Goto, M., Grady, C. A., Henning, T., Hodapp, K., Honda, M., Inutsuka, S., Kokubo, E., Knapp, G., McElwain, M. W., Momose, M., Ohashi, N., Okamoto, Y. K., Takami, M., Turner, E. L., Wisniewski, J., Janson, M., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Carson, J., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Golota, T., Guyon, O., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Ishii, M., Kandori, R., Kusakabe, N., Matsuo, T., Mayama, S., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takato, N., Terada, H., Thalmann, C., Tomono, D., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., and Usuda, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report high-resolution 1.6 $\micron$ polarized intensity ($PI$) images of the circumstellar disk around the Herbig Ae star AB Aur at a radial distance of 22 AU ($0."15$) up to 554 AU (3.$"$85), which have been obtained by the high-contrast instrument HiCIAO with the dual-beam polarimetry. We revealed complicated and asymmetrical structures in the inner part ($\lesssim$140 AU) of the disk, while confirming the previously reported outer ($r$ $\gtrsim$200 AU) spiral structure. We have imaged a double ring structure at $\sim$40 and $\sim$100 AU and a ring-like gap between the two. We found a significant discrepancy of inclination angles between two rings, which may indicate that the disk of AB Aur is warped. Furthermore, we found seven dips (the typical size is $\sim$45 AU or less) within two rings as well as three prominent $PI$ peaks at $\sim$40 AU. The observed structures, including a bumpy double ring, a ring-like gap, and a warped disk in the innermost regions, provide essential information for understanding the formation mechanism of recently detected wide-orbit ($r$ $>$20 AU) planets., Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Near-Infrared Multi-Band Photometry of the Substellar Companion GJ 758 B
- Author
-
Janson, M., Carson, J., Thalmann, C., McElwain, M. W., Goto, M., Crepp, J., Wisniewski, J., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Burrows, A., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Grady, C. A., Golota, T., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Henning, T., Hodapp, K. W., Ishii, M., Iye, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Matsuo, T., Mayama, S., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Moro-Martin, A., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tofflemire, B., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
GJ 758 B is a cold (~600K) companion to a Sun-like star at 29 AU projected separation, which was recently detected with high-contrast imaging. Here we present photometry of the companion in seven photometric bands from Subaru/HiCIAO, Gemini/NIRI and Keck/NIRC2, providing a rich sampling of the spectral energy distribution in the 1-5 micron wavelength range. A clear detection at 1.58 micron combined with an upper limit at 1.69 micron shows methane absorption in the atmosphere of the companion. The mass of the companion remains uncertain, but an updated age estimate indicates that the most likely mass range is ~30-40 Mjup. In addition, we present an updated astrometric analysis that imposes tighter constraints on GJ 758 B's orbit and identifies the proposed second candidate companion, "GJ 758 C", as a background star., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. New version: Corrected a few numbers in the astrometry section (which were already correct in the print version, but were based on an outdated simulation in the astro-ph version)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Imaging of a Transitional Disk Gap in Reflected Light: Indications of Planet Formation Around the Young Solar Analog LkCa 15
- Author
-
Thalmann, C., Grady, C. A., Goto, M., Wisniewski, J. P., Janson, M., Henning, T., Fukagawa, M., Honda, M., Mulders, G. D., Min, M., Moro-Martín, A., McElwain, M. W., Hodapp, K. W., Carson, J., Abe, L., Brandner, W., Egner, S., Feldt, M., Fukue, T., Golota, T., Guyon, O., Hashimoto, J., Hayano, Y., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, S., Ishii, M., Kandori, R., Knapp, G. R., Kudo, T., Kusakabe, N., Kuzuhara, M., Matsuo, T., Miyama, S., Morino, J. -I., Nishimura, T., Pyo, T. -S., Serabyn, E., Shibai, H., Suto, H., Suzuki, R., Takami, M., Takato, N., Terada, H., Tomono, D., Turner, E. L., Watanabe, M., Yamada, T., Takami, H., Usuda, T., and Tamura, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present H- and Ks-band imaging data resolving the gap in the transitional disk around LkCa 15, revealing the surrounding nebulosity. We detect sharp elliptical contours delimiting the nebulosity on the inside as well as the outside, consistent with the shape, size, ellipticity, and orientation of starlight reflected from the far-side disk wall, whereas the near-side wall is shielded from view by the disk's optically thick bulk. We note that forward-scattering of starlight on the near-side disk surface could provide an alternate interpretation of the nebulosity. In either case, this discovery provides confirmation of the disk geometry that has been proposed to explain the spectral energy distributions (SED) of such systems, comprising an optically thick outer disk with an inner truncation radius of ~46 AU enclosing a largely evacuated gap. Our data show an offset of the nebulosity contours along the major axis, likely corresponding to a physical pericenter offset of the disk gap. This reinforces the leading theory that dynamical clearing by at least one orbiting body is the cause of the gap. Based on evolutionary models, our high-contrast imagery imposes an upper limit of 21 Jupiter masses on companions at separations outside of 0.1" and of 13 Jupiter masses outside of 0.2". Thus, we find that a planetary system around LkCa 15 is the most likely explanation for the disk architecture., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. Minor change to Figure 4
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Forty seven new T dwarfs from the UKIDSS Large Area Survey
- Author
-
Burningham, Ben, Pinfield, D. J., Lucas, P. W., Leggett, S. K., Deacon, N. R., Tamura, M., Tinney, C. G., Lodieu, N., Zhang, Z. H., Huelamo, N., Jones, H. R. A., Murray, D. N., Mortlock, D. J., Patel, M., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Osorio, M. R. Zapatero, Ishii, M., Kuzuhara, M., and Smart, R. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of 47 new T dwarfs in the Fourth Data Release (DR4) from the Large Area Survey (LAS) of the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey with spectral types ranging from T0 to T8.5. These bring the total sample of LAS T dwarfs to 80 as of DR4. In assigning spectral types to our objects we have identified 8 new spectrally peculiar objects, and divide 7 of them into two classes. H2O-H-early have a H2O-H index that differs with the H2O-J index by at least 2 sub-types. CH4-J-early have a CH4-J index that disagrees with the H20-J index by at least 2 subtypes. We have ruled out binarity as a sole explanation for both types of peculiarity, and suggest that they may represent hitherto unrecognised tracers of composition and/or gravity. Clear trends in z'(AB)-J and Y-J are apparent for our sample, consistent with weakening absorption in the red wing of the KI line at 0.77microns with decreasing effective temperature. We have used our sample to estimate space densities for T6-T9 dwarfs. By comparing our sample to Monte-Carlo simulations of field T dwarfs for various mass functions of the form phi(M) \propto M^-alpha, we have placed weak constraints on the form of the field mass function. Our analysis suggests that the substellar mass function is declining at lower masses, with negative values of alpha preferred. This is at odds with results for young clusters that have been generally found to have alpha > 0., Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures. MNRAS accepted. Version 2 includes omitted authors.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Decadal Trends in the Oceanic Storage of Anthropogenic Carbon From 1994 to 2014
- Author
-
Müller, Jens Daniel, primary, Gruber, N., additional, Carter, B., additional, Feely, R., additional, Ishii, M., additional, Lange, N., additional, Lauvset, S. K., additional, Murata, A., additional, Olsen, A., additional, Pérez, F. F., additional, Sabine, C., additional, Tanhua, T., additional, Wanninkhof, R., additional, and Zhu, D., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Exploring the substellar temperature regime down to ~550K
- Author
-
Burningham, Ben, Pinfield, D. J., Leggett, S. K., Tamura, M., Lucas, P. W., Homeier, D., Day-Jones, A., Jones, H. R. A., Clarke, J. R. A., Ishii, M., Kuzuhara, M., Lodieu, N., Osorio, M. R. Zapatero, Venemans, B. P., Mortlock, D. J., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Martin, E. L., and Magazzu, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of three very late T dwarfs in the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Third Data Release: ULAS J101721.40+011817.9 (ULAS1017), ULAS J123828.51+095351.3 (ULAS1238) and ULAS J133553.45+113005.2 (ULAS1335).We detail optical and near-infrared photometry for all three sources, and mid-infrared photometry for ULAS1335. We use near-infrared spectra of each source to assign spectral types T8p (ULAS1017), T8.5 (ULAS1228) and T9 (ULAS1335) to these objects. We estimate that ULAS1017 has 750 < Teff < 850K, and 5.0 < log g < 5.5, assuming solar metallicity, an age of 1.6-15 Gyr, a mass of 33-70 MJ and lies at a distance of 31-54 pc. We extend the unified scheme of Burgasser et al. (2006) to the type T9 and suggest the inclusion of the WJ index to replace the now saturated J-band indices. ULAS1335 is the same spectral type as ULAS J003402.77-005206.7 and CFBDS J005910.90-011401.3. Comparison of model spectra with that of ULAS1335 suggest a temperature below 600K. We find ULAS1335 to be extremely red in near to mid-infrared colours, with H-[4.49]=4.34+/-0.04. This is the reddest near to mid-infrared colour yet observed for a T dwarf, which supports Teff < 600K, and we estimate Teff ~550-600K for ULAS1335. We estimate that ULAS1335 has an age of 0.6-5.3 Gyr, a mass of 15-31 MJ and lies at a distance of 8-12 pc., Comment: MNRAS accepted. 17 pages, 15 figures. Abstract abridged. Revised to reflect referees comments. Revisions include: slightly revised Teff estimate for ULAS1335; additional figure demonstrating spectral type index degeneracy; revised discussion of NH3-H index; revised IRAC photometry based on re-reduction (small changes)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Two T dwarfs from the UKIDSS Early Data Release
- Author
-
Kendall, T. R., Tamura, M., Tinney, C. G., Martin, E. L., Ishii, M., Pinfield, D. J., Lucas, P. W., Jones, H. R. A., Leggett, S. K., Dye, S., Hewett, P. C., Allard, F., Baraffe, I., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Carraro, G., Casewell, S. L., Chabrier, G., Chappelle, R. J., Clarke, F., Day-Jones, A., Deacon, N., Dobbie, P. D., Folkes, S., Hambly, N. C., Hodgkin, S. T., Nakajima, T., Jameson, R. F., Lodieu, N., Magazzu, A., McCaughrean, M. J., Pavlenko, Y. V., Tadashi, N., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the first ultracool dwarf discoveries from the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Large Area Survey Early Data Release (LAS EDR), in particular the discovery of T dwarfs which are fainter and more distant than those found using the 2MASS and SDSS surveys. We aim to show that our methodologies for searching the ~27 sq degs of the LAS EDR are successful for finding both L and T dwarfs $via$ cross-correlation with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) DR4 release. While the area searched so far is small, the numbers of objects found shows great promise for near-future releases of the LAS and great potential for finding large numbers of such dwarfs. Ultracool dwarfs are selected by combinations of their YJH(K) UKIDSS colours and SDSS DR4 z-J and i-z colours, or, lower limits on these red optical/infrared colours in the case of DR4 dropouts. After passing visual inspection tests, candidates have been followed up by methane imaging and spectroscopy at 4m and 8m-class facilities. Our main result is the discovery following CH4 imaging and spectroscopy of a T4.5 dwarf, ULASJ 1452+0655, lying ~80pc distant. A further T dwarf candidate, ULASJ 1301+0023, has very similar CH4 colours but has not yet been confirmed spectroscopically. We also report on the identification of a brighter L0 dwarf, and on the selection of a list of LAS objects designed to probe for T-like dwarfs to the survey J-band limit. Our findings indicate that the combination of the UKIDSS LAS and SDSS surveys provide an excellent tool for identifying L and T dwarfs down to much fainter limits than previously possible. Our discovery of one confirmed and one probable T dwarf in the EDR is consistent with expectations from the previously measured T dwarf density on the sky., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, A&A in press
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Study of the Distribution of Star-Forming Regions in Luminous Infrared Galaxies by Means of H$\alpha$ Imaging Observations
- Author
-
Hattori, T., Yoshida, M., Ohtani, H., Sugai, H., Ishigaki, T., Sasaki, M., Hayashi, T., Ozaki, S., Ishii, M., and Kawai, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We performed H-alpha imaging observations of 22 luminous infrared galaxies to investigate how the distribution of star-forming regions in these galaxies is related to galaxy interactions. Based on correlation diagrams between H-alpha flux and continuum emission for individual galaxies, a sequence for the distribution of star-forming regions was found: very compact (~100 pc) nuclear starbursts with almost no star-forming activity in the outer regions (type 1), dominant nuclear starbursts < 1 kpc in size and a negligible contribution from the outer regions (type 2), nuclear starbursts > 1 kpc in size and a significant contribution from the outer regions (type 3), and extended starbursts with relatively faint nuclei (type 4). These classes of star-forming region were found to be strongly related to global star-forming properties such as star-formation efficiency, far-infrared color, and dust extinction. There was a clear tendency for the objects with more compact distributions of star-forming regions to show a higher star-formation efficiency and hotter far-infrared color. An appreciable fraction of the sample objects were dominated by extended starbursts (type 4), which is unexpected in the standard scenario of interaction-induced starburst galaxies. We also found that the distribution of star-forming regions was weakly but clearly related to galaxy morphology: severely disturbed objects had a more concentrated distribution of star-forming regions. This suggests that the properties of galaxy interactions, such as dynamical phase and orbital parameters, play a more important role than the internal properties of progenitor galaxies, such as dynamical structure or gas mass fraction. We also discuss the evolution of the distribution of star-forming regions in interacting galaxies., Comment: 44 pages, LaTeX, Accepted by AJ, Version with full-resolution figures available at http://www.oao.nao.ac.jp/support/staff/hattori/lirgs_paper.ps.gz
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A review of global ocean temperature observations: Implications for ocean heat content estimates and climate change
- Author
-
Abraham, JP, Baringer, M, Bindoff, NL, Boyer, T, Cheng, LJ, Church, JA, Conroy, JL, Domingues, CM, Fasullo, JT, Gilson, J, Goni, G, Good, SA, Gorman, JM, Gouretski, V, Ishii, M, Johnson, GC, Kizu, S, Lyman, JM, Macdonald, AM, Minkowycz, WJ, Moffitt, SE, Palmer, MD, Piola, AR, Reseghetti, F, Schuckmann, K, Trenberth, KE, Velicogna, I, and Willis, JK
- Subjects
Earth Sciences ,Oceanography ,Geophysics ,Climate Action ,Life Below Water ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,global warming ,ocean heat content ,Argo float ,thermosteric sea level rise ,expendable bathythermograph ,Earth energy balance ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Earth sciences ,Physical sciences - Abstract
The evolution of ocean temperature measurement systems is presented with a focus on the development and accuracy of two critical devices in use today (expendable bathythermographs and conductivity-temperature-depth instruments used on Argo floats). A detailed discussion of the accuracy of these devices and a projection of the future of ocean temperature measurements are provided. The accuracy of ocean temperature measurements is discussed in detail in the context of ocean heat content, Earth's energy imbalance, and thermosteric sea level rise. Up-to-date estimates are provided for these three important quantities. The total energy imbalance at the top of atmosphere is best assessed by taking an inventory of changes in energy storage. The main storage is in the ocean, the latest values of which are presented. Furthermore, despite differences in measurement methods and analysis techniques, multiple studies show that there has been a multidecadal increase in the heat content of both the upper and deep ocean regions, which reflects the impact of anthropogenic warming. With respect to sea level rise, mutually reinforcing information from tide gauges and radar altimetry shows that presently, sea level is rising at approximately 3 mm yr-1 with contributions from both thermal expansion and mass accumulation from ice melt. The latest data for thermal expansion sea level rise are included here and analyzed. Key Points Oceanographic techniques and analysis have improved over many decadesThese improvements allow more accurate Earth-energy balance estimatesUnderstanding of ocean heat content and sea-level rise has also increased ©2013. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
- Published
- 2013
45. Toward a Reliable Gigabit Network - an Upgrade of the Spring-8 Network
- Author
-
Fukui, T., Ishii, M., Tanaka, R., Masuda, T., and Ohata, T.
- Subjects
Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The SPring-8 controls network has maintained accelerator operations in high reliability and shown good performance during the past years. To cope with the increase of loads on the network due to faster data acquisition and the addition of equipment data, networking hardware has been installed in the last few years. The upgraded network replaces the original FDDI backbone and switches with mixed FDDI/gigabit ethernet and Layer-3 switches. It is necessary to keep the double ring topology for the FDDI and introduce link aggregation technology for the gigabit ethernet to maintain the full redundancy and bandwidth of the system. This paper will discuss the network performance of the gigabit ethernet including its latency and redundancy. We also discuss a future plan for the network including Quality-of-Service over the gigabit ethernet., Comment: International Conference on Accelerator and Large Experimental Physics Control Systems San Jose, California, November 27-30, 2001, (THDT005), 3 pages, PDF genarated by MS-Word 98 on MAC
- Published
- 2001
46. Development of an Interpreter Program for an Equipment Control
- Author
-
Furukawa, Y., Ishii, M., Nakatani, T., and Ohata, T.
- Subjects
Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
A message oriented software scheme is used for the SPring-8 beamline control. In the early stage, we developed customized control programs for each beamline. As the number of beamlines increased, however, it became necessary to introduce a general software scheme that cloud handle the control sequence for every beamline. We developed a new server program, Command Interpreter (CI), as a software framework. The CI interprets a high-level compound message issued from client programs and decomposes it to a set of primitive control messages. The message are sent to the VME computers afterwards. For flexibility, the operation sequences specific to the individual baemline component are standardized and defined in the interface definition files. Using the CI, the response time overhead is reduced to 26% and the XAFS measurement time also decreases by about 50%., Comment: Poster Presentation for the ICALEPCS'2001 Paper Status Number : WEAP033
- Published
- 2001
47. Upgrade of Spring-8 Beamline Network with Vlan Technology Over Gigabit Ethernet
- Author
-
Ishii, M., Fukui, T., Furukawa, Y., Nakatani, T., Ohata, T., and Tanaka, R.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,C.2.1 - Abstract
The beamline network system at SPring-8 consists of three LANs; a BL-LAN for beamline component control, a BL-USER-LAN for beamline experimental users and an OA-LAN for the information services. These LANs are interconnected by a firewall system. Since the network traffic and the number of beamlines have increased, we upgraded the backbone of BL-USER-LAN from Fast Ethernet to Gigabit Ethernet. And then, to establish the independency of a beamline and to raise flexibility of every beamline, we also introduced the IEEE802.1Q Virtual LAN (VLAN) technology into the BL-USER-LAN. We discuss here a future plan to build the firewall system with hardware load balancers., Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure, 8th International Conference on Accelerator and Large Experimental Physics Control Systems (PSN TUAP056), San Jose, CA, USA, November 27-30
- Published
- 2001
48. XANES study of rare-earth valency in LRu4P12 (L = Ce and Pr)
- Author
-
Lee, C. H., Oyanagi, H., Sekine, C., Shirotani, I., and Ishii, M.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Valency of Ce and Pr in LRu4P12 (L = Ce and Pr) was studied by L2,3-edge x-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy. The Ce-L3 XANES spectrum suggests that Ce is mainly trivalent, but the 4f state strongly hybridizes with ligand orbitals. The band gap of CeRu4P12 seems to be formed by strong hybridization of 4f electrons. Pr-L2 XANES spectra indicate that Pr exists in trivalent state over a wide range in temperature, 20 < T < 300 K. We find that the metal-insulator (MI) transition at TMI = 60 K in PrRu4P12 does not originate from Pr valence fluctuation., Comment: 4 pages
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Indicators of Global Climate Change 2022: annual update of large-scale indicators of the state of the climate system and human influence
- Author
-
Forster, P.M., Smith, C.J., Walsh, T., Lamb, W.F., Lamboll, R., Hauser, M., Ribes, A., Rosen, D., Gillett, N., Palmer, M.D., Rogelj, J., von Schuckmann, K., Seneviratne, S.I., Trewin, B., Zhang, X., Allen, M., Andrew, R., Birt, A., Borger, A., Boyer, T., Broersma, J.A., Cheng, L., Dentener, F., Friedlingstein, P., Gutiérrez, J.M., Gütschow, J., Hall, B., Ishii, M., Jenkins, S., Lan, X., Lee, J., Morice, C., Kadow, C., Kennedy, J., Killick, R., Minx, J.C., Naik, V., Peters, G.P., Pirani, A., Pongratz, J., Schleussner, C.F., Szopa, S., Thorne, P., Rohde, R., Rojas Corradi, M., Schumacher, D., Vose, R., Zickfeld, K., Masson-Delmotte, V., and Zhai, P.
- Abstract
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments are the trusted source of scientific evidence for climate negotiations taking place under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), including the first global stocktake under the Paris Agreement that will conclude at COP28 in December 2023. Evidence-based decision-making needs to be informed by up-to-date and timely information on key indicators of the state of the climate system and of the human influence on the global climate system. However, successive IPCC reports are published at intervals of 5–10 years, creating potential for an information gap between report cycles. We follow methods as close as possible to those used in the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) Working Group One (WGI) report. We compile monitoring datasets to produce estimates for key climate indicators related to forcing of the climate system: emissions of greenhouse gases and short-lived climate forcers, greenhouse gas concentrations, radiative forcing, surface temperature changes, the Earth's energy imbalance, warming attributed to human activities, the remaining carbon budget, and estimates of global temperature extremes. The purpose of this effort, grounded in an open data, open science approach, is to make annually updated reliable global climate indicators available in the public domain (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8000192, Smith et al., 2023a). As they are traceable to IPCC report methods, they can be trusted by all parties involved in UNFCCC negotiations and help convey wider understanding of the latest knowledge of the climate system and its direction of travel. The indicators show that human-induced warming reached 1.14 [0.9 to 1.4] ∘C averaged over the 2013–2022 decade and 1.26 [1.0 to 1.6] ∘C in 2022. Over the 2013–2022 period, human-induced warming has been increasing at an unprecedented rate of over 0.2 ∘C per decade. This high rate of warming is caused by a combination of greenhouse gas emissions being at an all-time high of 54 ± 5.3 GtCO2e over the last decade, as well as reductions in the strength of aerosol cooling. Despite this, there is evidence that increases in greenhouse gas emissions have slowed, and depending on societal choices, a continued series of these annual updates over the critical 2020s decade could track a change of direction for human influence on climate.
- Published
- 2023
50. Hadronic screening masses and the magnetic gluon condensate at high temperature
- Author
-
Ishii, M. and Hatsuda, T.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The hadronic screening mass at high temperature ($T$) in QCD$_4$ is examined on the basis of the QCD sum rules in (2+1) dimensions. Due to the magnetic gluon condensate at high $T$ which is expected to be nonvanishing, the screening mass deviates from the asymptotic value $2\pi T$. Also, the screening mass in the vector (pseudo-vector) channel turns out to be heavier than that in the scalar (pseudo-scalar) channel., Comment: 9 pages (LaTeX) +3 figures (available on request), KUNS 1282
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.