1,407 results on '"Brandner, W"'
Search Results
202. On the dynamics of the ABDoradus system
- Author
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Guirado, J. C., Marti-Vidal, I., Marcaide, J. M., Close, L. M., Algaba, J. C., Brandner, W., Lestrade, J. -F., Jauncey, D. L., Jones, D. L., Preston, R. A., and Reynolds, J. E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an astrometric analysis of the binary systems ABDorA /ABDorC and ABDorBa / ABDorBb. These two systems of well-known late-type stars are gravitationally associated and they constitute the quadruple ABDoradus system. From the astrometric data available at different wavelengths, we report: (i) a determination of the orbit of ABDorC, the very low mass companion to ABDorA, which confirms the mass estimate of 0.090Msun reported in previous works; (ii) a measurement of the parallax of ABDorBa, which unambiguously confirms the long-suspected physical association between this star and ABDorA; and (iii) evidence of orbital motion of ABDorBa around ABDorA, which places an upper bound of 0.4Msun on the mass of the pair ABDorBa / ABDorBb (50% probability). Further astrometric monitoring of the system at all possible wavelengths would determine with extraordinary precision the dynamical mass of its four components., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
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- 2005
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203. A Hubble Space Telescope ACS Search for Brown Dwarf Binaries in the Pleiades Open Cluster
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Bouy, H., Moraux, E., Bouvier, J., Brandner, W., Martin, E. L., Allard, F., Baraffe, I., and Fernandez, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a high-resolution imaging survey for brown dwarf binaries in the Pleiades open cluster. The observations were carried out with the Advance Camera for Surveys onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Our sample consists of 15 bona-fide brown dwarfs. We confirm 2 binaries and detect their orbital motion, but we did not resolve any new binary candidates in the separation range between 5.4AU and 1700AU and masses in the range 0.035--0.065~Msun. Together with the results of our previous study (Martin et al., 2003), we can derive a visual binary frequency of 13.3$^{+13.7}_{-4.3}$\% for separations greater than 7~AU masses between 0.055--0.065~M$_{\sun}$ and mass ratios between 0.45--0.9$
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- 2005
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204. AB Doradus C: Age, Spectral Type, Orbit, and Comparison to Evolutionary Models
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Nielsen, E. L., Close, L. M., Guirado, J. C., Biller, B. A., Lenzen, R., Brandner, W., Hartung, M., and Lidman, C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We expand upon the results of Close et al. 2005 regarding the young, low-mass object AB Dor C and its role as a calibration point for theoretical tracks. We present an improved spectral reduction and a new orbital solution with two additional epochs. Our improved analysis confirms our spectral type of M8 (+/- 1) and mass of 0.090+/-0.003 solar masses for AB Dor C. Comparing the results for AB Dor C with other young, low-mass objects with dynamical masses we find a general trend where current evolutionary models tend to over-predict the temperature (or under-predict the mass) for low mass stars and brown dwarfs. Given our precision, there is a ~99% chance that the mass of AB Dor C is underestimated by the DUSTY tracks in the HR diagram., Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, proceedings for the workshop "Ultralow-mass star formation and evolution", to be published in Astronomische Nachrichten - Astronomical Notes
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- 2005
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205. The low-mass initial mass function of the field population in the Large Magellanic Cloud with Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 Observations
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Gouliermis, D., Brandner, W., and Henning, Th.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present V- and I-equivalent HST/WFPC2 stellar photometry of an area in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), located on the western edge of the bar of the galaxy, which accounts for the general background field of its inner disk. The WFPC2 observations reach magnitudes as faint as V=25 mag, and the large sample of more than 80,000 stars allows us to determine in detail the Present-Day Mass Function (PDMF) of the detected main-sequence stars, which is identical to the Initial Mass Function (IMF) for masses M <~ 1 M_solar. The low-mass main-sequence mass function of the LMC field is found not to have a uniform slope throughout the observed mass range, i.e. the slope does not follow a single power law. This slope changes at about 1 M_solar to become more shallow for stars with smaller masses down to the lowest observed mass of ~ 0.7 M_solar, giving clear indications of flattening for even smaller masses. We verified statistically that for stars with M <~ 1 M_solar the IMF has a slope Gamma around -2, with an indicative slope Gamma =~ -1.4 for 0.7 <~ M/M_solar <~ 0.9, while for more massive stars the main-sequence mass function becomes much steeper with Gamma =~ -5. The main-sequence luminosity function (LF) of the observed field is in very good agreement with the Galactic LF as it was previously found. Taking into account several assumptions concerning evolutionary effects, which should have changed through time the stellar content of the observed field, we reconstruct qualitatively its IMF for the whole observed mass range (0.7 <~ M/M_solar <~ 2.3) and we find that the number of observed evolved stars is not large enough to have affected significantly the form of the IMF, which thus is found almost identical to the observed PDMF., Comment: 16 pages in ApJ Journal format, 7 figures, Submitted to ApJ. The size of the postscript files of the images has been reduced because of disk space limitations
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- 2005
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206. GRAVITY: The AO-Assisted, Two-Object Beam-Combiner Instrument
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Eisenhauer, F., Perrin, G., Rabien, S., Eckart, A., Lena, P., Genzel, R., Abuter, R., Paumard, T., and Brandner, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the proposal for the infrared adaptive optics (AO) assisted, two-object, high-throughput, multiple-beam-combiner GRAVITY for the VLTI. This instrument will be optimized for phase-referenced interferometric imaging and narrow-angle astrometry of faint, red objects. Following the scientific drivers, we analyze the VLTI infrastructure, and subsequently derive the requirements and concept for the optimum instrument. The analysis can be summarized with the need for highest sensitivity, phase referenced imaging and astrometry of two objects in the VLTI beam, and infrared wavefront-sensing. Consequently our proposed instrument allows the observations of faint, red objects with its internal infrared wavefront sensor, pushes the optical throughput by restricting observations to K-band at low and medium spectral resolution, and is fully enclosed in a cryostat for optimum background suppression and stability. Our instrument will thus increase the sensitivity of the VLTI significantly beyond the present capabilities. With its two fibers per telescope beam, GRAVITY will not only allow the simultaneous observations of two objects, but will also push the astrometric accuracy for UTs to 10 micro-arcsec, and provide simultaneous astrometry for up to six baselines., Comment: 12 pages, to be published in the Proceedings of the ESO Workshop on "The Power of Optical/IR Interferometry: Recent Scientific Results and 2nd Generation VLTI Instrumentation", eds. F. Paresce, A. Richichi, A. Chelli and F. Delplancke, held in Garching, Germany, 4-8 April 2005
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- 2005
207. The sub-arcsecond dusty environment of Eta Carinae
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Chesneau, O., Min, M., Herbst, T., Waters, L. B. F. M., Hillier, D. J., Leinert, Ch., De Koter, A., Pascucci, I., Jaffe, W., Kohler, R., Alvarez, C., Van Boekel, R., Brandner, W., Graser, U., Lagrange, A. M., Lenzen, R., Morel, S., and Scholler, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The core of the nebula surrounding Eta Carinae has been observed with the VLT Adaptive Optics system NACO and with the interferometer VLTI/MIDI to constrain spatially and spectrally the warm dusty environment and the central object. In particular, narrow-band images at 3.74 and 4.05 micron reveal the butterfly shaped dusty environment close to the central star with unprecedented spatial resolution. A void whose radius corresponds to the expected sublimation radius has been discovered around the central source. Fringes have been obtained in the Mid-IR which reveal a correlated flux of about 100Jy situated 0.3" south-east of the photocenter of the nebula at 8.7 micron, which corresponds with the location of the star as seen in other wavelengths. This correlated flux is partly attributed to the central object, and these observations provide an upper limit for the SED of the central source from 2.2 to 13.5 micron. Moreover, we have been able to spectrally disperse the signal from the nebula itself at PA=318 degree, i.e. in the direction of the bipolar nebula 310 degree) within the MIDI field of view of 3". A large amount of corundum (Al2O3) is discovered, peaking at 0.6-1.2" south-east from the star, whereas the dust content of the Weigelt blobs is dominated b silicates. We discuss the mechanisms of dust formation which are closely related to the geometry of this Butterfly nebulae.
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- 2005
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208. A NICMOS Direct Imaging Search for Giant Planets around the Single White Dwarfs in the Hyades
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Friedrich, S., Zinnecker, H., Brandner, W., Correia, S., and McCaughrean, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report preliminary results from our search for massive giant planets (6-12 Jupiter masses) around the known seven single white dwarfs in the Hyades cluster at sub-arcsec separations. At an age of 625 Myr, the white dwarfs had progenitor masses of about 3 solar masses, and massive gaseous giant planets should have formed in the massive circumstellar disks around these ex-Herbig A0 stars, probably at orbital separations similar or slightly larger than that of Jupiter. Such planets would have survived the post-Main-Sequence mass loss of the parent star and would have migrated outward adiabatically to a distance of about 25 AU. At the distance of the Hyades (45 pc) this corresponds to an angular separation of 0.5 arcsec. J and H magnitudes of these giants are in the range of 20.5-23.3 mag, which can be resolved with NICMOS. The achieved sensitivities and contrast ratios agree well with simulations. Preliminary evaluation of the NICMOS data set did not reveal any evidence for neither planetary mass companions with masses down to about 10 Jupiter masses nor brown dwarfs around any of the seven white dwarfs for separations larger than 0.5 arcsec., Comment: 14th European Workshop on White Dwarfs
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- 2005
209. The Initial Mass Function toward the low-mass end in the Large Magellanic Cloud with HST/WFPC2 Observations
- Author
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Gouliermis, D., Brandner, W., and Henning, Th.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present V and I equivalent HST/WFPC2 photometry of two areas in the Large Magellanic Cloud: The southern part of the stellar association LH 52, located on the western edge of the super-shell LMC 4, and a field between two associations, which is located on the southwestern edge of the shell, and which accounts for the general background field of the galaxy. The HST/WFPC2 observations reach magnitudes as faint as V=25 mag, much deeper than have been observed earlier in stellar associations in the LMC. We determine the MF for main-sequence stars in the areas. Its slope (Gamma) in both areas is steeper for stars with masses M < 2 M_solar (-4 < Gamma < -6), compared with stars of M > 2 M_solar (-1 < Gamma < -2). Thus, as far as the field of the LMC concerns the MF does not have a uniform slope throughout its observed mass range. The MF of the general field of the LMC was found previously to be steeper than the MF of a stellar association for massive stars with M > 5 M_solar. We conclude that this seems to be also the case toward lower masses down to M ~ 1 M_solar. Our data allow to construct the field-subtracted, incompleteness-corrected, main-sequence MF of the southwestern part of the young stellar association LH 52, which accounts for the Initial Mass Function (IMF) of the system. Its mean slope is found to be comparable, but still more shallow than a typical Salpeter IMF (Gamma = -1.12 +/- 0.24) for masses down to ~ 1 M_solar. We found indications that the IMF of the association probably is ``top-heavy'', due to the large number of intermediate-mass stars in the field of the system, while the general LMC field is found to be responsible for the low-mass population, with M < 2 M_solar, observed in both fields., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2004
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210. A possible third component in the L dwarf binary system DENIS-P J020529.0-115925 discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope
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Bouy, H., Martin, E. L., Brandner, W., and Bouvier, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results showing that the multiple system DENIS-P J020529.0-115925 is likely to be a triple system of brown dwarfs. The secondary of this previously known binary system shows a clear elongation on six images obtained at six different epochs. Significant residuals remain after PSF subtraction on these images, characteristic of multiplicity, and indicating that the secondary is probably a double itself. Dual-PSF fitting shows that the shape of the secondary is consistent with that of a binary system. These measurements show that the probability that DENIS-P J020529.0-115925 is a triple system is very high. The photometric and spectroscopic properties of the system are consistent with the presence of three components with spectral types L5, L8 and T0., Comment: 15 pages, 3 tables, 6 figures, accepted for publication in AJ. High resolution version available at ftp://ftp.mpe.mpg.de/people/hbouy/publications/denis0205.ps.gz
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- 2004
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211. First determination of the dynamical mass of a binary L dwarf
- Author
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Bouy, H., Duchene, G., Koehler, R., Brandner, W., Bouvier, J., Martin, E. L., Ghez, A., Delfosse, X., Forveille, T., Allard, F., Baraffe, I., Basri, G., Close, L., and McCabe, C. E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present here the results of astrometric, photometric and spectroscopic observations leading to the determination of the orbit and dynamical masses of the binary L dwarf 2MASSW J0746425+2000321. High angular resolution observations spread over almost 4 years and obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT), and a the W. M. Keck Observatory (Keck) allow us to cover 36% of the period, corresponding to 60% of the orbit, and, for the first time, to derive a precise estimate of the total and individual masses of such a late-type object. We find an orbital period of 3850.9$^{+904}_{-767}$ days. The corresponding total mass is 0.146$^{+0.016}_{-0.006}$ M$_{\sun}$, with uncertainties depending on the distance. Spatially resolved low resolution optical (550--1025 nm) spectra have been obtained with HST/STIS, allowing us to measure the spectral types of the two components (L0$\pm$0.5 for the primary and L1.5$\pm$0.5 for the secondary). We also present precise photometry of the individual components measured on the high angular resolution images obtained with HST/ACS and WFPC2 (visible), VLT/NACO (J, H and Ks bands) and Keck I (Ks) band). These spectral and photometric measurements enable us to estimate their effective temperatures and mass ratio, and to place the object accurately in a H--R diagram. The binary system is most likely formed by a primary with a mass of 0.085$\pm$0.010 M$_{\sun}$ and a secondary with a mass of 0.066$\pm$0.006 M$_{\sun}$, thus clearly substellar, for an age of approximately 300$\pm$150 Myr. H$\alpha$ variability indicates chromospheric and/or magnetic activity., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A 16 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables
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- 2004
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212. A young binary Brown Dwarf in the R-CrA star formation region
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Bouy, H., Brandner, W., Martin, E. L., Delfosse, X., Allard, F., Baraffe, I., Forveille, T., and Demarco, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present imaging and spectroscopic observations with HST (WFPC2, ACS/HRC and STIS), VLT (FORS2) and Keck (HIRES) of the dM8 ultra-cool dwarf DENIS-P J185950.9-370632, located in the R-CrA region. The presence of lithium absorption at 670.8 nm and the strong Halpha emission indicate a young age and a sub-stellar mass. Our diffraction-limited images resolve a companion at the separation limit of HST/ACS (~0.06"). The 2.1 mJy flux in the LW2 filter (5.0-8.5 microns) of the Infrared Space Observatory (see 1999A&A...350..883) likely corresponds to an infrared excess, suggesting the presence of circumstellar material. Proper motion and photometric measurements, as well as the Halpha activity, confirm membership in the R-CrA star forming region. If confirmed by further observations, DENIS-P J185950.9-370632 would be the first accreting sub-stellar multiple system observed to date., Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables Version with full resolution figures available on: ftp://ftp.mpe.mpg.de/people/hbouy/publications/DENIS1859.ps.gz
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- 2004
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213. Search for substellar companions using AO - first results obtained with NAOS-CONICA
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Mugrauer, M., Neuhäuser, R., Guenther, E., Brandner, W., Alves, J., and Ammler, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present first results of our NAOS-CONICA search for close substellar companions around young nearby stars. This program was started only a few months ago. We have obtained 1st epoch images of several targets which are unpublished young stars (age<100 Myrs), hence ideal targets to look for planetary companions. For one target star we could even take a 2nd epoch image. By comparing both images we could look for co-moving companions of the target star. Those data show clearly that the detection of planetary companions m <13 Mjup inward a saturn-like orbit (r<10 AU) is feasible with NAOS-CONICA and in addition that the astrometric confirmation of those companions is doable with only a few weeks of epoch difference., Comment: ESO workshop 2003
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- 2004
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214. HD 77407 and GJ 577: two new young stellar binaries detected with the Calar Alto Adaptive Optics system ALFA
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Mugrauer, M., Neuhäuser, R., Guenther, E. W., Hatzes, A. P., Huélamo, N., Fernández, M., Ammler, M., Retzlaff, J., König, B., Charbonneau, D., Jayawardhana, R., and Brandner, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results from our search for close stellar and sub-stellar companions to young nearby stars on the northern sky. Our infrared imaging observations are obtained with the 3.5 m Calar Alto telescope and the AO system ALFA. With two epoch observations which were separated by about one year, we found two co-moving companion candidates, one close to HD 77407 and one close to GJ 577. For the companion candidate near GJ 577, we obtained an optical spectrum showing spectral type M4.5; this candidate is a bound low-mass stellar companion confirmed by both proper motion and spectroscopy. We estimate the masses for HD 77407 B and GJ 577 B to be ~0.3 to 0.5 Msun and ~0.16 to 0.2 Msun, respectively. Compared to Siess al.(2000) models, each of the two pairs appears co-eval with HD 77407 A,B being 10 to 40 Myrs old and GJ 577 A,B being older than 100 Myrs. We also took multi-epoch high-resolution spectra of HD 77407 to search for sub-stellar companions, but did not find any with 3 Mjup as upper mass (msin(i)) limit (for up to 4 year orbits); however, we detected a long-term radial velocity trend in HD 77407 A, consistent with a ~ 0.3 Msun companion at ~ 50 AU separation, i.e. the one detected by the imaging. Hence, HD 77407 B is confirmed to be a bound companion to HD 77407 A. We also present limits for undetected, but detectable companions using a deep image of HD 77407 A and B, also observed with the Keck NIRC2 AO system; any brown dwarfs were detectable outside of 0.5 arcsec (17 AU at HD 77407), giant planets with masses from ~ 6.5 to 12 Mjup were detectable at > 1.5 arcsec., Comment: in press
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- 2004
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215. The Stellar Content and Star Formation History of the late-type spiral galaxy NGC 300 from Hubble Space Telescope observations
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Butler, D. J., Martinez-Delgado, D., and Brandner, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first WFPC2 V, I photometry for the Sculptor Group galaxy NGC 300 in four fields ranging from the centre to the outer edge. We have made the first measurement of the star formation histories in two disk fields: the oldest stars were born at similar epochs and formation activity increased but at different mean rates. The main disk stellar population is predominantly old, consisting of RGB and AGB stars, based on a synthetic colour magnitude diagram analysis. Z is found to have been more metal poor than 0.006 (or 0.33Zsolar) with no evidence for significant change in the mean Z value over time in both disk fields. In the central region, we find a dearth of bright stars with respect to the two disk fields that cannot be explained by observational effects. Taken at face value, this finding would agree with the Davidge (1998) report of suppressed star formation there during the past 1Gyr with respect to his disk fields at larger radii; but the possibility of significant central extinction affecting our finding remains. We have also determined the first distance modulus estimate based on the tip of the red giant branch method: on the Cepheid distance scale of Ferrarese et al. (2000) we find (m-M)o = 26.56+/-0.07 (+/-0.13) mag; and a similar value from the Cepheid-independent empirical method by Lee et al. (1993), both in good agreement with the Cepheid distance determined by Freedman et al. (2001). A discrepancy between this and the theoretical calibration of the red giant branch tip magnitude method remains. Finally, we report a newly detected young (up to about 10Myr) stellar association of about average size (~140pc) in one of the disk fields., Comment: 47 pages, 12 figures (the quality of Figures 1 and 6 has been degraded), Corrected minor textual errors and two reference omissions to match the version to be published in The Astronomical Journal
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- 2003
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216. Surface Brightness Fluctuations: A Case for Extremely Large Telescopes
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Gouliermis, D., Brandner, W., Butler, D., and Hippler, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Surface Brightness Fluctuations (SBF) Method for distance determinations of elliptical galaxies is been modeled in order to investigate the effect of the Point Spread Function (PSF). We developed a method to simulate observations of SBF of galaxies having various properties and located at different distances. We will use this method in order to test the accuracy on the estimates of the extra-galactic distances for PSFs representing typical seeing conditions, Adaptive Optics (AO) systems and for future observations with Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs) close to the diffraction limit., Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the ESO Workshop "Science with Adaptive Optics", eds. W. Brandner & M. Kasper, Springer-Verlag 2004
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- 2003
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217. NACO Polarimetric Differential Imaging of TW Hya: A Sharp Look at the Closest T Tauri Disk
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Apai, D., Pascucci, I., Brandner, W., Henning, Th., Lenzen, R., Potter, D. E., Lagrange, A. -M., and Rousset, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-contrast imaging data on the disk of the classical T Tauri star TW Hya. The images were obtained through the polarimetric differential imaging technique with the adaptive optics system NACO. Our commissioning data show the presence of polarized disk emission between 0.1" and 1.4" from the star. We derive the first Ks-band radial polarized intensity distribution. We show that the polarized intensity compares well to shorter wavelengths surface brightness observations and confirm the previously reported gradual slope change around 0.8". These results show the potential of the new polarimetric differential imaging technique at 8m-class telescopes to map the inner regions of protoplanetary disks., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics; 7 pages, 7 figures
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- 2003
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218. Direct measurement of the size and shape of the present-day stellar wind of Eta Carinae
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van Boekel, R., Kervella, P., Schoeller, M., Herbst, T., Brandner, W., Waters, L. B. F. M., Hillier, D. J., Paresce, F., Lenzen, R., and Lagrange, A. -M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present new high angular resolution observations at near-IR wavelengths of the core of the Luminous Blue Variable Eta Carinae, using NAOS-CONICA at the VLT and VINCI at the VLT Interferometer (VLTI). The latter observations provide spatial information on a scale of 5 milli-arcsec or ~11 AU at the distance of Eta Carinae. The present-day stellar wind of Eta Carinae is resolved on a scale of several stellar radii. Assuming spherical symmetry, we find a mass loss rate of 1.6x10^{-3} M_sun/yr and a wind clumping factor of 0.26. The VLTI data taken at a baseline of 24 meter show that the object is elongated with a de-projected axis ratio of approximately 1.5; the major axis is aligned with that of the large bi-polar nebula that was ejected in the 19th century. The most likely explanation for this observation is a counter-intuitive model in which stellar rotation near the critical velocity causes enhanced mass loss along the rotation axis. This results from the large temperature difference between pole and equator in rapidly rotating stars. Eta Carinae must rotate in excess of 90 per cent of its critical velocity to account for the observed shape. The large outburst may have been shaped in a similar way. Our observations provide strong support for the existence of a theoretically predicted rotational instability, known as the Omega limit., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A letters
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- 2003
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219. First NACO observations of the Brown Dwarf LHS 2397aB
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Masciadri, E., Brandner, W., Bouy, H., Lenzen, R., Lagrange, A. M., and Lacombe, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of the standard late type M8 star LHS 2397aA were obtained at the ESO-VLT 8m telescope ``Yepun'' using the NAOS/CONICA Adaptive Optics facility. The observations were taken during the NACO commissioning, and the infrared standard star LHS 2397aA was observed in the H, and Ks broad band filters. In both bands the brown dwarf companion LHS2397aB was detected. Using a program recently developed (Bouy et al., 2003) for the detection of stellar binaries we calculated the principal astrometric parameters (angular binary separation and position angle P.A.) and the photometry of LHS 2397aA and LHS 2397aB. Our study largely confirms previous results obtained with the AO-Hokupa'a facility at Gemini-North (Freed et al., 2003); however a few discrepancies are observed., Comment: 5 pages
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- 2003
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220. Epsilon Indi Ba/Bb: the nearest binary brown dwarf
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McCaughrean, M. J., Close, L. M., Scholz, R. -D., Lenzen, R., Biller, B., Brandner, W., Hartung, M., and Lodieu, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have carried out high angular resolution near-infrared imaging and low-resolution (R~1000) spectroscopy of the nearest known brown dwarf, Eps Indi B, using the ESO VLT NAOS/CONICA adaptive optics system. We find it to be a close binary (as also noted by Volk et al. 2003) with an angular separation of 0.732 arcsec, corresponding to 2.65AU at the 3.626pc distance of the Eps Indi system. In our discovery paper (Scholz et al. 2003), we concluded that Eps Indi B was a ~50Mjup T2.5 dwarf: our revised finding is that the two system components (Eps Indi Ba and Eps Indi Bb) have spectral types of T1 and T6, respectively, and estimated masses of 47 and 28Mjup, respectively, assuming an age of 1.3Gyr. Errors in the masses are +/-10 and +/-7Mjup, respectively, dominated by the uncertainty in the age determination (0.8-2Gyr range). This uniquely well-characterised T dwarf binary system should prove important in the study of low-mass, cool brown dwarfs. The two components are bright and relatively well-resolved: Eps Indi B is the only T dwarf binary in which spectra have been obtained for both components. They have a well-established distance and age. Finally, their orbital motion can be measured on a fairly short timescale (nominal orbital period 15 yrs), permitting an accurate determination of the true total system mass, helping to calibrate brown dwarf evolutionary models., Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics main journal. This replacement version includes minor changes made following comments by the referee, along with a reworking of the photometric data and derived quantities using 2MASS catalogue photometry as the basis, with only a minor impact on the final results
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- 2003
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221. VLT/NACO adaptive optics imaging of the TY CrA system - A fourth stellar component candidate detected
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Chauvin, G., Lagrange, A-M., Beust, H., Fusco, T., Mouillet, D., Lacombe, F., Gendron, E., Rousset, G., Rouan, D., Brandner, W., Lenzen, R., Hubin, N., Hartung, M., and Perrier, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of a possible subsolar mass companion to the triple young system TY CrA using the NACO instrument at the VLT UT4 during its commissioning. Assuming for TY CrA a distance similar to that of the close binary system HD 176386, the photometric spectral type of this fourth stellar component candidate is consistent with an ~M4 star. We discuss the dynamical stability of this possible quadruple system as well as the possible location of dusty particles inside or outside the system., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures postscript
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- 2003
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222. Inward Bound: Studying the Galactic Centre with NAOS/CONICA
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Ott, T., Schoedel, R., Genzel, R., Eckart, A., Lacombe, F., Rouan, D., Hofmann, R., Lehnert, M., Alexander, T., Sternberg, A., Reid, M., Brandner, W., Lenzen, R., Hartung, M., Gendron, E., Clenet, Y., Lena, P., Rousset, G., Lagrange, A. -M., Ageorges, N., Hubin, N., Lidman, C., Moorwood, A. F. M., Renzini, A., Spyromilio, J., Tacconi-Garman, L. E., Menten, K. M., and Mouawad, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the first results obtained using adaptive optics measurements of the Galactic Centre done with NAOS/CONICA., Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures
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- 2003
223. Mapping of shadows cast on a protoplanetary disk by a close binary system
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D’Orazi, V., Gratton, R., Desidera, S., Avenhaus, H., Mesa, D., Stolker, T., Giro, E., Benatti, S., Jang-Condell, H., Rigliaco, E., Sissa, E., Scatolin, T., Benisty, M., Bhowmik, T., Boccaletti, A., Bonnefoy, M., Brandner, W., Buenzli, E., Chauvin, G., Daemgen, S., Damasso, M., Feldt, M., Galicher, R., Girard, J., Janson, M., Hagelberg, J., Mouillet, D., Kral, Q., Lannier, J., Lagrange, A.-M., Langlois, M., Maire, A.-L., Menard, F., Moeller-Nilsson, O., Perrot, C., Peretti, S., Rabou, P., Ramos, J., Rodet, L., Roelfsema, R., Roux, A., Salter, G., Schlieder, J. E., Schmidt, T., Szulagyi, J., Thalmann, C., Thebault, P., van der Plas, G., Vigan, A., and Zurlo, A.
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- 2019
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224. Closest Star Seen Orbiting the Supermassive Black Hole at the Centre of the Milky Way
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Schodel, R., Ott, T., Genzel, R., Hofmann, R., Lehnert, M., Eckart, A., Mouawad, N., Alexander, T., Reid, M. J., Lenzen, R., Hartung, M., Lacombe, F., Rouan, D., Gendron, E., Rousset, G., Lagrange, A. -M., Brandner, W., Ageorges, N., Lidman, C., Moorwood, A. F. M., Spyromilio, J., Hubin, N., and Menten, K. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Measurements of stellar velocities and variable X-ray emission near the centre of the Milky Way have provided the strongest evidence so far that the dark mass concentrations seen in many galactic nuclei are likely supermassive black holes, but have not yet excluded several alternative configurations. Here we report ten years of high resolution astrometric imaging that allow us to trace two thirds of the orbit of the star currently closest to the compact radio source and massive black hole candidate SgrA*. In particular, we have observed both peri- and apocentre passages. Our observations show that the star is on a bound, highly elliptical Keplerian orbit around SgrA*, with an orbital period of 15.2 years and a peri-centre distance of only 17 light hours. The orbital elements require an enclosed point mass of 3.7+-1.5x10^6 solar masses. The data exclude with high confidence that the central dark mass consists of a cluster of astrophysical objects or massive, degenerate fermions, and strongly constrain the central density structure., Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, scheduled for publication in Nature on 17 Oct 2002
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- 2002
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225. Mass Function of the Arches Cluster from Gemini Adaptive Optics Data
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Stolte, A., Grebel, E. K., Brandner, W., and Figer, D. F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have analysed high resolution adaptive optics (AO) science demonstration data of the young, massive stellar cluster Arches near the Galactic Center, obtained with the Gemini North telescope in combination with the University of Hawai'i AO system Hokupa'a. The AO H and K' photometry is calibrated using HST/NICMOS observations in the equivalent filters F160W and F205W obtained by Figer et al. (1999). ... After a thorough technical comparison, the Gemini and HST data are used in combination to study the spatial distribution of stellar masses in the Arches cluster. ... A strong colour gradient is observed over the cluster field. The visual extinction increases by Delta A_V ~ 10 mag over a distance of 15 arcsec from the cluster core. Extinction maps reveal a low-extinction cavity in the densest parts of Arches (R < 5 arcsec), indicating the depletion of dust due to stellar winds or photo-evaporation. We correct for the change in extinction over the field and show that the slope of the mass function is strongly influenced by the effects of differential extinction. We obtain present-day mass function slopes of Gamma=-0.8 +- 0.2 in the mass range 6 < M < 65 Msun from both data sets. The spatial analysis reveals a steepening of the mass function slope from close to zero in the cluster center to about -1.7 +- 0.7 at R > 10 arcsec, in accordance with a Salpeter slope, Gamma=-1.35. The bias in the mass function towards high-mass stars in the Arches center is a strong indication for mass segregation. The dynamical and relaxation timescales for Arches are estimated, and possible mass segregation effects are discussed with respect to cluster formation models., Comment: Latex A&A Style, 22 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2002
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226. Hokupa'a-Gemini Discovery of Two Ultracool Companions to the Young Star HD 130948
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Potter, D., Martín, E. L., Cushing, M. C., Baudoz, P., Brandner, W., Guyon, O., and Neuhauser, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of two faint ultracool companions to the nearby (d~17.9 pc) young G2V star HD 130948 (HR 5534, HIP 72567) using the Hokupa'a adaptive optics instrument mounted on the Gemini North 8-meter telescope. Both objects have the same common proper motion as the primary star as seen over a 7 month baseline and have near-IR photometric colors that are consistent with an early-L classification. Near-IR spectra taken with the NIRSPEC AO instrument on the Keck II telescope reveal K I lines, FeH, and water bandheads. Based on these spectra, we determine that both objects have spectral type dL2 with an uncertainty of 2 spectral subclasses. The position of the new companions on the H-R diagram in comparison with theoretical models is consistent with the young age of the primary star (<0.8 Gyr) estimated on the basis of X-ray activity, lithium abundance and fast rotation. HD 130948 B and C likely constitute a pair of young contracting brown dwarfs with an orbital period of about 10 years, and will yield dynamical masses for L dwarfs in the near future., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, (13 total pages)
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- 2002
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227. Discovery of a 0.15' Binary Brown Dwarf 2MASSJ 1426316+155701 With Gemini/Hokupa'a Adaptive Optics
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Close, L. M., Potter, D., Brandner, W., Lloyd-Hart, M., Liebert, J., Burrows, A., and Siegler, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Use of the highly sensitive Hokupa'a curvature wavefront sensor has allowed for the first time direct adaptive optics (AO) guiding on brown dwarfs and VLM stars (SpT=M7-L2). An initial survey of 9 such objects discovered one 0.15" binary (2MASSJ 1426316+155701). The companion is about half as bright as the primary (Delta K = 0.61+/-0.05$, Delta H = 0.70+/-0.05) and has even redder colors H-K=0.59+/-0.14 than the primary. The blended spectrum of the binary has been previously determined to be M9.0. We modeled a blend of an M8.5 template and a L1-L3 template reproducing a M9.0 spectrum in the case of Delta K = 0.61+/-0.05,Delta H = 0.70\pm0.05$. These spectral types also match the observed H-K colors of each star. Based the previously observed low space motion and $H_{\alpha}$ activity we assign an age of $0.8^{+6.7}_{-0.3} Gyr$. Utilizing this age range and the latest DUSTY models of the Lyon group we assign a photometric distance of $18.8^{+1.44}_{-1.02} pc$ and masses of $M_{A}=0.074^{+0.005}_{-0.011} M_\odot$ and $M_{B}=0.066^{+0.006}_{-0.015} M_\odot$. We therefore estimate a system separation of $2.92_{+0.22}^{-0.16}AU$ and a period of $13.3{+3.18}^{-1.51} yr$ respectively. Hence, 2M1426 is among the smallest separation brown dwarf binaries resolved to date.
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- 2001
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228. Population Gradients in Local Group Dwarf Spheroidals
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Harbeck, D., Grebel, E. K., Holtzman, J., Guhathakurta, P., Brandner, W., Geisler, D., Sarajedini, A., Dolphin, A., Hurley-Keller, D., and Mateo, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a systematic and homogeneous analysis of population gradients for the Local Group dwarf spheroidals (dSphs) Carina, Sculptor, Sextans, Tucana, Andromeda I-III, V, and VI. For all of the Milky Way companions studied here we find significant population gradients. The same is true for the remote dSph Tucana located at the outskirts of the LG. Among the M 31 dSph companions only Andromeda I and VI show obvious gradients. In all cases where a HB morphology gradient is visible, the red HB stars are more centrally concentrated. The occurence of a HB morphological gradient shows a correlation with a morphology gradient in the red giant branch. It seems likely that metallicity is the driver of the gradients in Sextans, Sculptor, Tucana, and Andromeda VI, while age is an important factor in Carina. We find no evidence that the vicinity of a nearby massive spiral galaxy influences the formation of the population gradients., Comment: accepted for publication in AJ; 25 pages; 11 images in jpeg and png format
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- 2001
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229. NGC 3603 - a Local Template for Massive Young Clusters
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Brandl, B., Brandner, W., Eisenhauer, F., Moffat, A. F. J., Palla, F., and Zinnecker, H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a study of the star cluster associated with the massive Galactic HII region NGC3603 based on near-IR broad-- and narrowband observations taken with ISAAC/VLT under excellent seeing conditions (<0.4''). We discuss color-color diagrams and address the impact of the high UV flux on the disk evolution of the low-mass stars., Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of IAU Symposium 207 "Extragalactic Star Clusters", eds. E. Grebel, D. Geisler and D. Minitti
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- 2001
230. ADONIS observations of X-ray emitting late B-type stars in Lindroos systems
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Huelamo, N., Brandner, W., Brown, A. G. A., Neuhaeuser, R., and Zinnecker, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present adaptive optics JHKs imaging observations of three main-sequence late B-type stars listed in the Lindroos Catalogue: HD123445, HD127971 and HD129791. Given their spectral types, these stars should not be X-ray emitters. However, they have been detected by ROSAT and their X-ray emission has been attributed to possible unresolved late-type companions. We have carried out near-IR observations with ADONIS at the ESO 3.6m but have not detected any late-type companions close to HD127971 and HD129791. This result leads us to conclude that either (i) they are spectroscopic binaries with unresolved low-mass companions, or (ii) they are intrinsic X-ray emitters. While the former case would be consistent with the reported high multiplicity of early-type (A and B) stars, the latter would yield a revision of stellar activity theories which do not predict X-ray emission from these stars. On the other hand, HD123445 does indeed show visual companions, namely an apparent subarcsecond faint (Ks=10mag) binary system at a projected separation of 5" from the late-B type star. The JHKs magnitudes and colors of the components are consistent with a pair of Pre Main Sequence (PMS) K-type stars at 140 pc, i.e. possible members of the Upper Centaurus Lupus association. In this case the reported X-ray emission can be ascribed to the new binary system. Nevertheless, spectroscopy is required to confirm the possible PMS nature of the pair., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted by A&A
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- 2001
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231. Subarcsecond Mid-IR Structure of the Dust Shell around IRAS 22272+5435
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Ueta, T., Meixner, M., Hinz, P. M., Hoffmann, W. F., Brandner, W., Dayal, A., Deutsch, L. K., Fazio, G. G., and Hora, J. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report sub-arcsecond imaging of extended mid-infrared emission from a proto-planetary nebula (PPN), \iras 22272+5435, performed at the MMT observatory with its newly upgraded 6.5 m aperture telescope and at the Keck observatory. The mid-infrared emission structure is resolved into two emission peaks separated by $0\arcsec.5 - 0\arcsec.6$ in the MMT 11.7 $\um$ image and in the Keck 7.9, 9.7, and 12.5 $\um$ images, corroborating the predictions based on previous multi-wavelength morphological studies and radiative transfer calculations. The resolved images show that the PPN dust shell has a toroidal structure with the $0\arcsec.5$ inner radius. In addition, an unresolved mid-IR excess appears at the nebula center. Radiative transfer model calculations suggest that the highly equatorially-enhanced ($\rho_{\rm eq}/\rho_{\rm pole} = 9$) structure of the PPN shell was generated by an axisymmetric superwind with ${\dot M}_{\rm sw} = 4 \times 10^{-6} M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$, which was preceded by a spherical asymptotic giant branch (AGB) wind with ${\dot M}_{\rm AGB} = 8 \times 10^{-7} M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. These model calculations also indicate that the superwind shell contains larger dust grains than the AGB wind shell. The unresolved mid-infrared excess may have been produced by a post-AGB mass loss at a rate of $2 - 6 \times 10^{-7} M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. While the central star left the AGB about 380 years ago after the termination of the superwind, the star seems to have been experiencing an ambient post-AGB mass loss with a sudden, increased mass ejection about 10 years ago., Comment: (25 pages in AASTeX preprint mode, 6 figures; to appear in the Astrophysical Journal)
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- 2001
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232. A Search for Jovian Planets around Hot White Dwarfs
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Chu, Y. -H., Dunne, B. C., Gruendl, R. A., and Brandner, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Current searches for extrasolar planets have concentrated on observing the reflex Doppler shift of solar-type stars. Little is known, however, about planetary systems around non-solar-type stars. We suggest a new method to extend planetary searches to hot white dwarfs. Near a hot white dwarf, the atmosphere of a Jovian planet will be photoionized and emit hydrogen recombination lines, which may be detected by high- dispersion spectroscopic observations. Multi-epoch monitoring can be used to distinguish between non-LTE stellar emission and planetary emission, and to establish the orbital parameters of the detected planets. In the future, high-precision astrometric measurements of the hot white dwarf will allow the masses of the detected planets to be determined. Searches for Jovian planets around hot white dwarfs will provide invaluable new insight on the development of planetary systems around stars more massive than the Sun and on how stellar evolution affects these systems. We present high-dispersion spectroscopic observations of the white dwarf Feige 34 to demonstrate the complexity and feasibility of the search method., Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the ApJ Letters
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- 2000
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233. The Peak Brightness and Spatial Distribution of AGB Stars Near the Nucleus of M32
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Davidge, T. J., Rigaut, F., Chun, M., Brandner, W., Potter, D., Northcott, M., and Graves, B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The bright stellar content near the center of the Local Group elliptical galaxy M32 is investigated with 0.12 arcsec FWHM H and K images obtained with the Gemini Mauna Kea telescope. Stars with K = 15.5, which are likely evolving near the tip of the asymptotic giant branch (AGB), are resolved to within 2 arcsec of the nucleus, and it is concluded that the peak stellar brightness near the center of M32 is similar to that in the outer regions of the galaxy. Moreover, the projected density of bright AGB stars follows the visible light profile to within 2 arcsec of the nucleus, indicating that the brightest stars are well mixed throughout the galaxy. Thus, there is no evidence for an age gradient, and the radial variations in spectroscopic indices and ultraviolet colors that have been detected previously must be due to metallicity and/or some other parameter. We suggest that either the bright AGB stars formed as part of a highly uniform and coherent galaxy-wide episode of star formation, or they originated in a separate system that merged with M32., Comment: 9 pages of text, 3 figures. ApJ (Letters) in press
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- 2000
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234. VLT-detection of two edge-on Circumstellar Disks in the rho Oph dark cloud
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Brandner, W., Sheppard, S., Zinnecker, H., Close, L., Iwamuro, F., Krabbe, A., Maihara, T., Motohara, K., Padgett, D. L., and Tokunaga, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of the rho Ophiuchi star forming region with VLT ANTU and ISAAC under 0.35" seeing conditions reveal two bipolar reflection nebulosities intersected by central dust lanes. The sources (OphE-MM3 and CRBR 2422.8-3423) can be identified as spatially resolved circumstellar disks viewed close to edge-on, similar to edge-on disk sources discovered previously in the Taurus and Orion star forming regions. Millimeter continuum fluxes yield disk masses of the order of 0.01 Mo, i.e. about the mass deemed necessary for the minimum solar nebula. Follow-up spectroscopic observations with SUBARU and CISCO show that both disk sources exhibit featureless continua in the K-band. No accretion or outflow signatures were detected. The slightly less edge-on orientation of the disk around CRBR 2422.8-3423 compared to HH 30 leads to a dramatic difference in the flux seen in the ISOCAM 4.5 mu to 12 mu bands. The observations confirm theoretical predictions on the effect of disk geometry and inclination angle on the spectral energy distribution of young stellar objects with circumstellar disks., Comment: 6 pages, 5 Postscript figures, uses aa.cls and psfig.sty. Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters, in press (December 2000 issue on early science results with the VLT)
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- 2000
235. Direct imaging search for planetary companions next to young nearby stars
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Neuhaeuser, R., Guenther, E., Brandner, W., Huelamo, N., Ott, T., Alves, J., Comeron, F., Eckart, A., and Cuby, J. -G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report first results from our ground-based infrared imaging search for sub-stellar companions (brown dwarfs and giant planets) of young (up to 100 Myrs) nearby (up to 75 pc) stars, where companions should be well separated from the central stars and still relatively bright due to ongoing accretion and/or contraction. Among our targets are all members of the TW Hya association, as well as other binary and single young stars either discovered recently among ROSAT sources (some of which as yet unpublished) or known before. Our observations are performed mainly with SOFI and SHARP at the ESO 3.5m NTT on La Silla and with ISAAC at the ESO 8.2m Antu (VLT-UT1) on Cerro Paranal, all in the H- and K-bands. We present direct imaging data and H-band spectroscopy of a faint object detected next to TWA-7 which, if at the same age and distance as the central star, could be an object with only a few Jupiter masses. Our spectrum shows, though, that it is a background K-dwarf., Comment: Conf. proceedings "From darkness to light" Cargese April 2000 Editors: T. Montmerle & Ph. Andre, ASP Conf. Series
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- 2000
236. Spectrum and proper motion of a brown dwarf companion of the T Tauri star CoD-33 7795
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Neuhaeuser, R., Guenther, E. W., Petr, M. G., Brandner, W., Huelamo, N., and Alves, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present optical and infrared spectra as well as the proper motion of an H=12 mag object 2" off the ~5 mag brighter spectroscopic binary star CoD-33 7795 (=TWA-5), a member of the TW Hya association of T Tauri stars at ~55 pc. It was suggested as companion candidate by Lowrance et al. (1999) and Webb et al. (1999), but neither a spectrum nor the proper motion of the faint object were available before. Our spectra taken with FORS2 and ISAAC at the ESO-VLT reveal that the companion candidate has spectral type M8.5 to M9. It shows strong H-alpha emission and weak Na I absorption, both indicative of a young age. The faint object is clearly detected and resolved in our optical and infrared images, with a FWHM of 0.18" in the FORS2 image. The faint object's proper motion, based on two year epoch difference, is consistent with the proper motion of CoD-33 7795 by 5 Gaussian sigma significance. From three different theoretical pre-main sequence models, we estimate the companion mass to be between ~15 and 40 M_jup, assuming the distance and age of the primary. A slight offset between the VLT and HST images with an epoch difference of two years can be interpreted as orbital motion. The probability for chance alignment of such a late-type object that close to CoD-33 7795 with the correct proper motion is below 7e-9. Hence, the faint object is physically associated with CoD-33 7795, the 4th brown dwarf companion around a normal star confirmed by both spectrum and proper motion, the first around a pre-main sequence star., Comment: A&A letters in press
- Published
- 2000
237. Timescales of disk evolution and planet formation
- Author
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Brandner, W., Zinnecker, H., Alcala, J. M., Allard, F., Covino, E., Frink, S., Kohler, R., Kunkel, M., Moneti, A., and Schweitzer, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-spatial resolution HST and adaptive optics observations, and high-sensitivity ISO (ISOCAM & ISOPHOT) observations of a sample of X-ray selected weak-line (WTTS) and post (PTTS) T Tauri stars located in the nearby Chamaeleon T and Scorpius-Centaurus OB associations. HST/NICMOS and adaptive optics observations aimed at identifying substellar companions at separations >=30 A.U. from the primary stars. No such objects were found within 300 A.U. of any of the target stars, and a number of faint objects at larger separations can very likely be attributed to a population of background stars. ISOCAM observations of 5 to 15 Myr old WTTS and PTTS in ScoCen reveal infrared excesses which are clearly above photospheric levels, and which have a spectral index intermediate between that of younger (1 to 5 Myr) T Tauri stars in Cha and that of pure stellar photospheres. The difference in the spectral index of the older PTTS in ScoCen compared to the younger classical and WTTS in Cha can be attributed to a deficiency of smaller size (0.1 to 1mu) dust grains relative to larger size (~5mu) dust grains in the disks of the PTTS. The lack of small dust grains is either due to the environment (effect of nearby O stars and supernova explosions) or due to disk evolution. If the latter is the case, it would hint that circumstellar disks start to get dust depleted at an age between 5 to 15 Myr. Dust depletion is very likely related to the build-up of larger particles (ultimately rocks and planetesimals) and thus an indicator for the onset of the period of planet formation., Comment: 15 pages, 7 Postscript figures, uses emulateapj.sty and psfig.sty. Astronomical Journal, in press (August 2000 issue)
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- 2000
238. Membership and Multiplicity among Very Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in the Pleiades Cluster
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Martin, E. L., Brandner, W., Bouvier, J., Luhman, K. L., Stauffer, J., Basri, G., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present near-infrared photometry and optical spectroscopy of very low-mass stars and brown dwarf candidates in the Pleiades open cluster. The membership status of these objects is assessed. Eight objects out of 45 appear to be non-members. A search for companions among 34 very low-mass Pleiades members (M$\le$0.09 M$_\odot$) in high-spatial resolution images obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and the adaptive optics system of the Canada-France-Hawaii telescope produced no resolved binaries with separations larger than 0.2 arcsec (a ~ 27 AU; P ~ 444 years). Nevertheless, we find evidence for a binary sequence in the color-magnitude diagrams, in agreement with the results of Steele & Jameson (1995) for higher mass stars. We compare the multiplicity statistics of the Pleiades very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs with that of G and K-type main sequence stars in the solar neighborhood (Duquennoy & Mayor 1991). We find that there is some evidence for a deficiency of wide binary systems (separation >27 AU) among the Pleiades very low-mass members. We briefly discuss how this result can fit with current scenarios of brown dwarf formation. We correct the Pleiades substellar mass function for the contamination of cluster non-members found in this work. We find a contamination level of 33% among the brown dwarf candidates identified by Bouvier et al. (1998). Assuming a power law IMF across the substellar boundary, we find a slope dN/dM ~ M^{-0.53}, implying that the number of objects per mass bin is still rising but the contribution to the total mass of the cluster is declining in the brown dwarf regime., Comment: to be published in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2000
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239. On the possibility of ground-based direct imaging detection of extra-solar planets: The case of TWA-7
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Neuhaeuser, R., Brandner, W., Eckart, A., Guenther, E., Alves, J., Ott, T., Huelamo, N., and Fernandez, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We show that {\em ground-based} direct imaging detection of extra-solar planets is possible with current technology. As an example, we present evidence for a possible planetary companion to the young T Tauri star 1RXSJ104230.3$-$334014 (=TWA-7), discovered by ROSAT as a member of the nearby TW Hya association. In an HST NICMOS F160W image, an object is detected that is more than 9 mag fainter than TWA-7, located $2.445 \pm 0.035^{\prime \prime}$ south-east at a position angle of $142.24 \pm 1.34^{\circ}$. One year later using the ESO-NTT with the SHARP speckle camera, we obtained H- and K-band detections of this faint object at a separation of $2.536 \pm 0.077^{\prime \prime}$ and a position angle of $139.3 \pm 2.1^{\circ}$. Given the known proper motion of TWA-7, the pair may form a proper motion pair. If the faint object orbits TWA-7, then its apparent magnitudes of H=$16.42 \pm 0.11$ and K=$16.34 \pm 0.15$ mag yield absolute magnitudes consistent with a $\sim 10^{6.5}$ yr old $\sim 3$ M$_{\rm jup}$ mass object according to the non-gray theory by Burrows et al. (1997). At $\sim 55$ pc, the angular separation of $\sim 2.5^{\prime \prime}$ corresponds to $\sim 138$~AU. However, position angles and separations are slightly more consistent with a background object than with a companion., Comment: A&A Letters in press (subm. 24 Sep 1999, accepted 23 Dec 1999)
- Published
- 1999
240. Low-mass stars in the massive HII region NGC 3603 - Deep NIR imaging with ANTU/ISAAC
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Brandl, B., Brandner, W., Eisenhauer, F., Moffat, A. F. J., Palla, F., and Zinnecker, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have observed NGC 3603, the most massive visible HII region known in the Galaxy, with ANTU(VLT1)/ISAAC in the near-infrared (NIR) J_s, H, and K_s bands. Our observations are the most sensitive observations made to date of this dense starburst region, allowing us to investigate with unprecedented quality its low-mass stellar population. Our mass limit to stars detected in all three bands is 0.1 Mo for a pre-main sequence star of age 0.7 Myr. The overall age of the pre-main sequence stars in the core region of NGC 3603 has been derived from isochrone fitting in the colour-magnitude diagram, leading to 0.3 - 1.0 Myr. The NIR luminosity functions show that the cluster is populated in low-mass stars at least down to 0.1 Mo. Our observations clearly show that sub-solar mass stars do form in massive starbursts., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, A&A style. A&A accepted, to appear December 1999
- Published
- 1999
241. HST/WFPC2 and VLT/ISAAC observations of PROPLYDS in the giant HII region NGC 3603
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Brandner, W., Grebel, E. K., Chu, Y. -H., Dottori, H., Brandl, B., Richling, S., Yorke, H. W., Points, S. D., and Zinnecker, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of three proplyd-like structures in the giant HII region NGC 3603. The emission nebulae are clearly resolved in narrow-band and broad-band HST/WFPC2 observations in the optical and broad-band VLT/ISAAC observations in the near-infrared. All three nebulae are tadpole shaped, with the bright ionization front at the head facing the central cluster and a fainter ionization front around the tail pointing away from the cluster. Typical sizes are 6,000 A.U. x 20,000 A.U. The nebulae share the overall morphology of the proplyds (``PROto PLanetarY DiskS'') in Orion, but are 20 to 30 times larger in size. Additional faint filaments located between the nebulae and the central ionizing cluster can be interpreted as bow shocks resulting from the interaction of the fast winds from the high-mass stars in the cluster with the evaporation flow from the proplyds. The striking similarity of the tadpole shaped emission nebulae in NGC 3603 to the proplyds in Orion suggests that the physical structure of both types of objects might be the same. We present 2D radiation hydrodynamical simulations of an externally illuminated star-disk-envelope system, which was still in its main accretion phase when first exposed to ionizing radiation from the central cluster. The simulations reproduce the overall morphology of the proplyds in NGC 3603 very well, but also indicate that mass-loss rates of up to 10^-5 Mo/yr are required in order to explain the size of the proplyds. (abbreviated), Comment: 10 pages, 4 Postscript figures, uses emulateapj.sty and psfig.tex. Astronomical Journal, in press (January 2000 issue)
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- 1999
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242. Discovery of a Very Low-Mass Binary with HST/NICMOS
- Author
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Martin, E. L., Basri, G., Brandner, W., Bouvier, J., R., Zapatero Osorio M., Rebolo, R., Stauffer, J., Allard, F., Baraffe, I., and Hodgkin, S. T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS observations are presented of six brown dwarf candidates in the Pleiades open cluster. One of them, namely CFHT-Pl-18, is clearly resolved as a binary with an angular separation of 0".33. The very low density of contaminating background stars in our images and the photometry of the components support that this system is a physical binary rather than a chance projection. All the available photometric and spectroscopic data indicate that the CFHT-Pl-18 system is likely a member of the Pleiades cluster, but a final confirmation will have to wait until lithium can be detected. Assuming cluster membership, we compare our NICMOS photometry with evolutionary models, and find that the inclusion of the effects of dust grains is necessary for fitting the data. We estimate that the masses of the components are about 0.045 Msol and 0.035 Msol. The binary system has a projected separation of 42 AU (for a distance of 125 pc) that is common among stellar binaries., Comment: 16 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 1998
243. The GRAVITY young stellar object survey: XI. Imaging the hot gas emission around the Herbig Ae star HD58647.
- Author
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Bouarour, Y.-I., Garcia Lopez, R., Sanchez-Bermudez, J., Caratti o Garatti, A., Perraut, K., Aimar, N., Amorim, A., Berger, J.-P., Bourdarot, G., Brandner, W., Clénet, Y., de Zeeuw, P. T., Dougados, C., Drescher, A., Eckart, A., Eisenhauer, F., Flock, M., Garcia, P., Gendron, E., and Genzel, R.
- Subjects
STARS ,STELLAR radiation ,CIRCUMSTELLAR matter ,GRAVITY ,DUST - Abstract
Aims. We aim to investigate the origin of the HI Brγ emission in young stars by using GRAVITY to image the innermost region of circumstellar disks, where important physical processes such as accretion and winds occur. With high spectral and angular resolution, we focus on studying the continuum and the HI Brγ-emitting area of the Herbig star HD 58647. Methods. Using VLTI-GRAVITY, we conducted observations of HD 58647 with both high spectral and high angular resolution. Thanks to the extensive uv coverage, we were able to obtain detailed images of the circumstellar environment at a sub-au scale, specifically capturing the continuum and the Brγ-emitting region. Through the analysis of velocity-dispersed images and photocentre shifts, we were able to investigate the kinematics of the HI Brγ-emitting region. Results. The recovered continuum images show extended emission where the disk major axis is oriented along a position angle of 14°. The size of the continuum emission at 5-σ levels is ~1.5 times more extended than the sizes reported from geometrical fitting (3.69 mas ± 0.02 mas). This result supports the existence of dust particles close to the stellar surface, screened from the stellar radiation by an optically thick gaseous disk. Moreover, for the first time with GRAVITY, the hot gas component of HD 58647 traced by the Brγ has been imaged. This allowed us to constrain the size of the Brγ-emitting region and study the kinematics of the hot gas; we find its velocity field to be roughly consistent with gas that obeys Keplerian motion. The velocity-dispersed images show that the size of the hot gas emission is from a more compact region than the continuum (2.3 mas ± 0.2 mas). Finally, the line phases show that the emission is not entirely consistent with Keplerian rotation, hinting at a more complex structure in the hot gaseous disk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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244. Polarization analysis of the VLTI and GRAVITY.
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GRAVITY Collaboration, Widmann, F., Haubois, X., Schuhler, N., Pfuhl, O., Eisenhauer, F., Gillessen, S., Aimar, N., Amorim, A., Bauböck, M., Berger, J. B., Bonnet, H., Bourdarot, G., Brandner, W., Clénet, Y., Davies, R., de Zeeuw, P. T., Dexter, J., Drescher, A., and Eckart, A.
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VERY large telescopes ,GRAVITY ,BREWSTER'S angle ,GALACTIC center ,POLARIMETRY ,ASTROMETRY ,MIRRORS - Abstract
Aims. The goal of this work is to characterize the polarization effects of the beam path of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) and the GRAVITY beam combiner instrument. This is useful for two reasons: to calibrate polarimetric observations with GRAVITY for instrumental effects and to understand the systematic error introduced to the astrometry due to birefringence when observing targets with a significant intrinsic polarization. Methods. By combining a model of the VLTI light path and its mirrors and dedicated experimental data, we constructed a full polarization model of the VLTI Unit Telescopes (UTs) and the GRAVITY instrument. We first characterized all telescopes together to construct a universal UT calibration model for polarized targets with the VLTI. We then expanded the model to include the differential birefringence between the UTs. With this, we were able to constrain the systematic errors and the contrast loss for highly polarized targets. Results. Along with this paper, we have published a standalone Python package that can be used to calibrate the instrumental effects on polarimetric observations. This enables the community to use GRAVITY with the UTs to observe targets in a polarimetric observing mode. We demonstrate the calibration model with the Galactic Center star IRS 16C. For this source, we were able to constrain the polarization degree to within 0.4% and the polarization angle to within 5° while being consistent with the literature values. Furthermore, we show that there is no significant contrast loss, even if the science and fringe-tracker targets have significantly different polarization, and we determine that the phase error in such an observation is smaller than 1
° , corresponding to an astrometric error of 10 µas. Conclusions. With this work, we enable the use by the community of the polarimetric mode with GRAVITY/UTs and outline the steps necessary to observe and calibrate polarized targets with GRAVITY. We demonstrate that it is possible to measure the intrinsic polarization of astrophysical sources with high precision and that polarization effects do not limit astrometric observations of polarized targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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245. Low-mass star formation in CG1: a diffraction limited search for pre-main sequence stars next to NX Pup
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Brandner, W., Bouvier, J., Grebel, E. K., Tessier, E., de Winter, D., and Beuzit, J. -L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Using adaptive optics at the ESO 3.6m telescope, we obtained diffraction limited JHK-images of the region around the Herbig AeBe star NX Pup. We clearly resolved the close companion (sep. 0.128") to NX Pup -- originally discovered by HST -- and measured its JHK magnitudes. A third object at a separation of 7.0" from NX Pup was identified as a classical T Tauri star so that NX Pup may in fact form a hierarchical triple system. We discuss the evolutionary status of these stars and derive estimates for their spectral types, luminosities, masses and ages., Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript. The preprint is also available at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/preprint/PrePrint.html
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- 1995
246. Imaging the innermost gaseous layers of the Mira star R Car with GRAVITY-VLTI
- Author
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Rosales-Guzmán, A., primary, Sanchez-Bermudez, J., additional, Paladini, C., additional, Alberdi, A., additional, Brandner, W., additional, Cannon, E., additional, González-Torá, G., additional, Haubois, X., additional, Henning, Th., additional, Kervella, P., additional, Montarges, M., additional, Perrin, G., additional, Schödel, R., additional, and Wittkowski, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
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247. Revisiting the atmosphere of the exoplanet 51 Eridani b with VLT/SPHERE
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Brown-Sevilla, S. B., primary, Maire, A.-L., additional, Mollière, P., additional, Samland, M., additional, Feldt, M., additional, Brandner, W., additional, Henning, Th., additional, Gratton, R., additional, Janson, M., additional, Stolker, T., additional, Hagelberg, J., additional, Zurlo, A., additional, Cantalloube, F., additional, Boccaletti, A., additional, Bonnefoy, M., additional, Chauvin, G., additional, Desidera, S., additional, D'Orazi, V., additional, Lagrange, A.-M., additional, Langlois, M., additional, Menard, F., additional, Mesa, D., additional, Meyer, M., additional, Pavlov, A., additional, Petit, C., additional, Rochat, S., additional, Rouan, D., additional, Schmidt, T., additional, Vigan, A., additional, and Weber, L., additional
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- 2023
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248. Revisiting the atmosphere of the exoplanet 51 Eridani b with VLT/SPHERE
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Brown-Sevilla, S. B., Maire, A. L., Molliere, P., Samland, M., Feldt, M., Brandner, W., Henning, Th., Gratton, R., Janson, Markus, Stolker, T., Hagelberg, J., Zurlo, A., Cantalloube, F., Boccaletti, A., Bonnefoy, M., Chauvin, G., Desidera, S., D'Orazi, V., Lagrange, A. -M., Langlois, M., Menard, F., Mesa, D., Meyer, M., Pavlov, A., Petit, C., Rochat, S., Rouan, D., Schmidt, T., Vigan, A., Weber, L., Brown-Sevilla, S. B., Maire, A. L., Molliere, P., Samland, M., Feldt, M., Brandner, W., Henning, Th., Gratton, R., Janson, Markus, Stolker, T., Hagelberg, J., Zurlo, A., Cantalloube, F., Boccaletti, A., Bonnefoy, M., Chauvin, G., Desidera, S., D'Orazi, V., Lagrange, A. -M., Langlois, M., Menard, F., Mesa, D., Meyer, M., Pavlov, A., Petit, C., Rochat, S., Rouan, D., Schmidt, T., Vigan, A., and Weber, L.
- Abstract
Aims. We aim to better constrain the atmospheric properties of the directly imaged exoplanet 51 Eri b using a retrieval approach with data of higher signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) than previously reported. In this context, we also compare the results from an atmospheric retrieval to using a self-consistent model to fit atmospheric parameters. Methods. We applied the radiative transfer code petitRADTRANS to our near-infrared SPHERE observations of 51 Eri b in order to retrieve its atmospheric parameters. Additionally, we attempted to reproduce previous results with the retrieval approach and compared the results to self-consistent models using the best-fit parameters from the retrieval as priors. Results. We present a higher S/N YH spectrum of the planet and revised K1K2 photometry (M-K1 = 15.11 +/- 0.04 mag, M-K2 = 17.11 +/- 0.38 mag). The best-fit parameters obtained using an atmospheric retrieval differ from previous results using self-consistent models. In general, we find that our solutions tend towards cloud-free atmospheres (e.g. log tau(clouds) = 5.20 +/- 1.44). For our `nominal' model with new data, we find a lower metallicity ([Fe/H] = 0.26 +/- 0.30 dex) and C/O ratio (0.38 +/- 0.09), and a slightly higher effective temperature (T-eff = 807 +/- 45 K) than previous studies. The surface gravity (log g = 4.05 +/- 0.37) is in agreement with the reported values in the literature within uncertainties. We estimate the mass of the planet to be between 2 and 4 MJup. When comparing with self-consistent models, we encounter a known correlation between the presence of clouds and the shape of the P-T profiles. Conclusions. Our findings support the idea that results from atmospheric retrievals should not be discussed in isolation, but rather along with self-consistent temperature structures obtained using the best-fit parameters of the retrieval. This, along with observations at longer wavelengths, might help to better characterise the atmospheres and determine their degree
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- 2023
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249. Where intermediate-mass black holes could hide in the Galactic Centre:A full parameter study with the S2 orbit
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Straub, O., Bauböck, M., Abuter, R., Aimar, N., Seoane, P. Amaro, Amorim, A., Berger, J. P., Bonnet, H., Bourdarot, G., Brandner, W., Cardoso, V., Clénet, Y., Dallilar, Y., Davies, R., De Zeeuw, P. T., Dexter, J., Drescher, A., Eisenhauer, F., Förster Schreiber, N. M., Foschi, A., Garcia, P., Gao, F., Gendron, E., Genzel, R., Gillessen, S., Habibi, M., Haubois, X., Heißel, G., Henning, T., Hippler, S., Horrobin, M., Jochum, L., Jocou, L., Kaufer, A., Kervella, P., Lacour, S., Lapeyrère, V., Le Bouquin, J.-b., Léna, P., Lutz, D., Ott, T., Paumard, T., Perraut, K., Perrin, G., Pfuhl, O., Rabien, S., Ribeiro, D. C., Bordoni, M. Sadun, Scheithauer, S., Shangguan, J., Shimizu, T., Stadler, J., Straubmeier, C., Sturm, E., Tacconi, L. J., Vincent, F., Von Fellenberg, S., Widmann, F., Wieprecht, E., Wiezorrek, E., Woillez, J., Straub, O., Bauböck, M., Abuter, R., Aimar, N., Seoane, P. Amaro, Amorim, A., Berger, J. P., Bonnet, H., Bourdarot, G., Brandner, W., Cardoso, V., Clénet, Y., Dallilar, Y., Davies, R., De Zeeuw, P. T., Dexter, J., Drescher, A., Eisenhauer, F., Förster Schreiber, N. M., Foschi, A., Garcia, P., Gao, F., Gendron, E., Genzel, R., Gillessen, S., Habibi, M., Haubois, X., Heißel, G., Henning, T., Hippler, S., Horrobin, M., Jochum, L., Jocou, L., Kaufer, A., Kervella, P., Lacour, S., Lapeyrère, V., Le Bouquin, J.-b., Léna, P., Lutz, D., Ott, T., Paumard, T., Perraut, K., Perrin, G., Pfuhl, O., Rabien, S., Ribeiro, D. C., Bordoni, M. Sadun, Scheithauer, S., Shangguan, J., Shimizu, T., Stadler, J., Straubmeier, C., Sturm, E., Tacconi, L. J., Vincent, F., Von Fellenberg, S., Widmann, F., Wieprecht, E., Wiezorrek, E., and Woillez, J.
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- 2023
250. Polarimetry and astrometry of NIR flares as event horizon scale, dynamical probes for the mass of Sgr A*
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Abuter, R., Aimar, N., Amaro Seoane, P., Amorim, A., Bauböck, M., Berger, J. P., Bonnet, H., Bourdarot, G., Brandner, W., Cardoso, V., Clénet, Y., Davies, R., De Zeeuw, P. T., Dexter, J., Drescher, A., Eckart, A., Eisenhauer, F., Feuchtgruber, H., Finger, G., Förster Schreiber, N. M., Foschi, A., Garcia, P., Gao, F., Gelles, Z., Gendron, E., Genzel, R., Gillessen, S., Hartl, M., Haubois, X., Haussmann, F., Heißel, G., Henning, T., Hippler, S., Horrobin, M., Jochum, L., Jocou, L., Kaufer, A., Kervella, P., Lacour, S., Lapeyrère, V., Le Bouquin, J.-b., Léna, P., Lutz, D., Mang, F., More, N., Ott, T., Paumard, T., Perraut, K., Perrin, G., Pfuhl, O., Rabien, S., Ribeiro, D. C., Sadun Bordoni, M., Scheithauer, S., Shangguan, J., Shimizu, T., Stadler, J., Straub, O., Straubmeier, C., Sturm, E., Tacconi, L. J., Vincent, F., Von Fellenberg, S., Widmann, F., Wielgus, M., Wieprecht, E., Wiezorrek, E., Woillez, J., Abuter, R., Aimar, N., Amaro Seoane, P., Amorim, A., Bauböck, M., Berger, J. P., Bonnet, H., Bourdarot, G., Brandner, W., Cardoso, V., Clénet, Y., Davies, R., De Zeeuw, P. T., Dexter, J., Drescher, A., Eckart, A., Eisenhauer, F., Feuchtgruber, H., Finger, G., Förster Schreiber, N. M., Foschi, A., Garcia, P., Gao, F., Gelles, Z., Gendron, E., Genzel, R., Gillessen, S., Hartl, M., Haubois, X., Haussmann, F., Heißel, G., Henning, T., Hippler, S., Horrobin, M., Jochum, L., Jocou, L., Kaufer, A., Kervella, P., Lacour, S., Lapeyrère, V., Le Bouquin, J.-b., Léna, P., Lutz, D., Mang, F., More, N., Ott, T., Paumard, T., Perraut, K., Perrin, G., Pfuhl, O., Rabien, S., Ribeiro, D. C., Sadun Bordoni, M., Scheithauer, S., Shangguan, J., Shimizu, T., Stadler, J., Straub, O., Straubmeier, C., Sturm, E., Tacconi, L. J., Vincent, F., Von Fellenberg, S., Widmann, F., Wielgus, M., Wieprecht, E., Wiezorrek, E., and Woillez, J.
- Published
- 2023
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