4,956 results on '"Wheatley, P"'
Search Results
352. Terrorism’s effect on Europe’s centre- and far-right parties
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Wheatley, William, Robbins, Joseph, Hunter, Lance Y., and Ginn, Martha Humphries
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- 2020
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353. Dialogic Practices in Primary School Classrooms
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Vrikki, Maria, Wheatley, Lisa, Howe, Christine, Hennessy, Sara, and Mercer, Neil
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Research into classroom dialogue suggests that certain forms are especially productive for students' learning. Despite the large number of studies in this area, there is inadequate evidence about the prevalence of the identified forms, let alone their productivity. However, scarcity is widely presumed. The overall aim of the study reported in this article was to examine the extent to which the forms are embedded within current practice in English primary schools. Video-recordings of two lessons from each of 36 classrooms formed the database, with two subjects from mathematics, English and science covered in each classroom. Each lesson was coded per turn for the presence of 'dialogic moves' and rated overall for the level of student involvement in specified activities. Results revealed that the supposedly productive forms were not always as scarce as sometimes presumed, while also highlighting huge variation in their relative occurrence. They also point to the role of professional development (PD) for teachers in promoting use of some forms.
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- 2019
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354. 'Quicksand of Hate': Experiences of Islamophobia and Poetic Resistance
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Wheatley, Lance
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How might English classrooms be spaces where Muslim students are empowered to recognise and resist Islamophobia? This qualitative study draws on theories of critical consciousness and Islamophobia to show how Bassim, a Muslim student, makes sense of Islamophobic encounters through the poetic and analytic writing he creates in his public high school English classroom. When examined intertextually, Bassim's words offer a glimpse of what Islamophobic experiences are like for some contemporary Muslim students. The findings suggest that through his English class, Bassim is able to use poetic and analytic writing as the means by which he recognises and resists Islamophobia. Further, this study indicates that more work should take up the implications of students' religious beliefs and the ways those beliefs shape their writing -- particularly when they are members of a marginalised religion.
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- 2019
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355. Teacher-Student Dialogue during Classroom Teaching: Does It Really Impact on Student Outcomes?
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Howe, Christine, Hennessy, Sara, Mercer, Neil, Vrikki, Maria, and Wheatley, Lisa
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It is now widely believed that classroom dialogue matters as regards student outcomes, with optimal patterns often regarded as requiring some or all of open questions, elaboration of previous contributions, reasoned discussion of competing viewpoints, linkage and coordination across contributions, metacognitive engagement with dialogue, and high student participation. To date, however, the relevance of such features has been most convincingly examined in relation to small-group interaction among students; little is known about their applicability to teacher-student dialogue. This article reports a large-scale study that permits some rebalancing. The study revolved around 2 lessons (covering 2 of mathematics, literacy, and science) that were video recorded in each of 72 demographically diverse classrooms (students' ages 10-11 years). Key measures of teacher-student dialogue were related to 6 indices of student outcome, which jointly covered curriculum mastery, reasoning, and educationally relevant attitudes. Prior attainment and attitudes were considered in analyses, as were other factors (e.g., student demographics and further aspects of classroom practice) that might confound interpretation of dialogue-outcome relations. So long as students participated extensively, elaboration and querying of previous contributions were found to be positively associated with curriculum mastery, and elaboration was also positively associated with attitudes.
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- 2019
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356. Best Practices for Undergraduate Teaching Assistant Programs
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Kinkead, Joyce, Titchener, Frances, and Wheatley, Rebecca
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Undergraduate teaching assistant (UTA) programs pair students with faculty to enhance teaching and learning in the classroom. These programs have the potential to offer a high-impact experience (Kuh, 2008); students feel more connected to learning when meaningfully engaged. UTAs develop important relationships with faculty mentors, hone problem-solving skills, feel more connected to the institution, and may begin to see themselves as future faculty. When the authors' institution celebrated the 25th anniversary of its UTA program, they thought it a good time to reflect and assess. This article delineates principles of best practices for institutions seeking to begin or revise a UTA program.
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- 2019
357. Creating Conditions for Literate Engagement: Teaching, Learning, and Acting in the World
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Burns, Leslie David, Faris, Amber, Melino, Flor, Turner, Wendy, and Wheatley, Abigail
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Abstract The authors illustrate how literacy and language arts teachers work with students to help them act and engage as agents in and beyond school. The authors demonstrate how teachers design environments for learning and practice and how young people use resulting skills and motivations intentionally as a result of their experiences in those environments. With certain conditions in place, students learn to engage purposefully as leaders their communities. The authors offer examples of how teachers help students engage in literate practices, demonstrate how young people think about literacy in their lives, and celebrate how students use their learning to attain their goals beyond academic achievement. The authors conclude by noting how systematic design of engaging school spaces reflects research-based findings about literacy engagement in high school classrooms, encouraging teachers to create conditions for engagement purposefully to support all youths in all contexts for similar success.
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- 2019
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358. EL CVn-type binaries - Discovery of 17 helium white dwarf precursors in bright eclipsing binary star systems
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Maxted, P. F. L., Bloemen, S., Heber, U., Geier, S., Wheatley, P. J., Marsh, T. R., Breedt, E., Sebastian, D., Faillace, G., Owen, C., Pulley, D., Smith, D., Kolb, U., Haswell, C. A., Southworth, J., Anderson, D. R., Smalley, B., Cameron, A. Collier, Hebb, L., Simpson, E. K., West, R. G., Bochinski, J., Busuttil, R., and Hadigal, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The star 1SWASP J024743.37-251549.2 was recently discovered to be a binary star in which an A-type dwarf star eclipses the remnant of a disrupted red giant star (WASP0247-25B). The remnant is in a rarely-observed state evolving to higher effective temperatures at nearly constant luminosity prior to becoming a very low-mass white dwarf composed almost entirely of helium, i.e., it is a pre-He-WD. We have used the WASP photometric database to find 17 eclipsing binary stars with orbital periods P=0.7 to 2.2 days with similar lightcurves to 1SWASP J024743.37-251549.2. The only star in this group previously identified as a variable star is the brightest one, EL CVn, which we adopt as the prototype for this class of eclipsing binary star. The characteristic lightcurves of EL CVn-type stars show a total eclipse by an A-type dwarf star of a smaller, hotter star and a secondary eclipse of comparable depth to the primary eclipse. We have used new spectroscopic observations for 6 of these systems to confirm that the companions to the A-type stars in these binaries have very low masses (approximately 0.2 solar masses). This includes the companion to EL CVn which was not previously known to be a pre-He-WD. EL CVn-type binary star systems will enable us to study the formation of very low-mass white dwarfs in great detail, particularly in those cases where the pre-He-WD star shows non-radial pulsations similar to those recently discovered in WASP0247-25B., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 18 pages
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- 2013
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359. Optical transmission photometry of the highly inflated exoplanet WASP-17b
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Bento, J., Wheatley, P. J., Copperwheat, C. M., Fortney, J. J., Dhillon, V. S., Hickman, R., Littlefair, S. P., Marsh, T. R., Parsons, S. G., and Southworth, J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present ground-based high-precision observations of the transit of WASP-17b using the multi-band photometer ULTRACAM on ESO's NTT in the context of performing transmission spectrophotometry of this highly inflated exoplanet. Our choice of filters (SDSS u', g' and r' bands) is designed to probe for the presence of opacity sources in the upper atmosphere. We find evidence for a wavelength dependence in the planet radius in the form of enhanced absorption in the SDSS r' band, consistent with a previously detected broad sodium feature. We present a new independent measurement of the planetary radius at Rpl = 1.97 +/- 0.06 Rjup, which confirms this planet as the most inflated exoplanet known to date. Our measurements are most consistent with an atmospheric profile devoid of enhanced TiO opacity, previously predicted to be present for this planet., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for MNRAS publication. Corrected typo on error bar for u band measurement
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- 2013
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360. The PLATO 2.0 Mission
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Rauer, H., Catala, C., Aerts, C., Appourchaux, T., Benz, W., Brandeker, A., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Deleuil, M., Gizon, L., Goupil, M. -J., Güdel, M., Janot-Pacheco, E., Mas-Hesse, M., Pagano, I., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Santos, N. C., Smith, A., -C., J., Suárez, Szabó, R., Udry, S., Adibekyan, V., Alibert, Y., Almenara, J. -M., Amaro-Seoane, P., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Asplund, M., Antonello, E., Ball, W., Barnes, S., Baudin, F., Belkacem, K., Bergemann, M., Bihain, G., Birch, A. C., Bonfils, X., Boisse, I., Bonomo, A. S., Borsa, F., Brandão, I. M., Brocato, E., Brun, S., Burleigh, M., Burston, R., Cabrera, J., Cassisi, S., Chaplin, W., Charpinet, S., Chiappini, C., Church, R. P., Csizmadia, Sz., Cunha, M., Damasso, M., Davies, M. B., Deeg, H. J., DÍaz, R. F., Dreizler, S., Dreyer, C., Eggenberger, P., Ehrenreich, D., Eigmüller, P., Erikson, A., Farmer, R., Feltzing, S., Fialho, F. de Oliveira, Figueira, P., Forveille, T., Fridlund, M., García, R. A., Giommi, P., Giuffrida, G., Godolt, M., da Silva, J. Gomes, Granzer, T., Grenfell, J. L., Grotsch-Noels, A., Günther, E., Haswell, C. A., Hatzes, A. P., Hébrard, G., Hekker, S., Helled, R., Heng, K., Jenkins, J. M., Johansen, A., Khodachenko, M. L., Kislyakova, K. G., Kley, W., Kolb, U., Krivova, N., Kupka, F., Lammer, H., Lanza, A. F., Lebreton, Y., Magrin, D., Marcos-Arenal, P., Marrese, P. M., Marques, J. P., Martins, J., Mathis, S., Mathur, S., Messina, S., Miglio, A., Montalban, J., Montalto, M., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Moradi, H., Moravveji, E., Mordasini, C., Morel, T., Mortier, A., Nascimbeni, V., Nelson, R. P., Nielsen, M. B., Noack, L., Norton, A. J., Ofir, A., Oshagh, M., Ouazzani, R. -M., Pápics, P., Parro, V. C., Petit, P., Plez, B., Poretti, E., Quirrenbach, A., Ragazzoni, R., Raimondo, G., Rainer, M., Reese, D. R., Redmer, R., Reffert, S., Rojas-Ayala, B., Roxburgh, I. W., Salmon, S., Santerne, A., Schneider, J., Schou, J., Schuh, S., Schunker, H., Silva-Valio, A., Silvotti, R., Skillen, I., Snellen, I., Sohl, F., Sousa, S. G., Sozzetti, A., Stello, D., Strassmeier, K. G., Švanda, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Tkachenko, A., Valencia, D., van Grootel, V., Vauclair, S. D., Ventura, P., Wagner, F. W., Walton, N. A., Weingrill, J., Werner, S. C., Wheatley, P. J., and Zwintz, K.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
PLATO 2.0 has recently been selected for ESA's M3 launch opportunity (2022/24). Providing accurate key planet parameters (radius, mass, density and age) in statistical numbers, it addresses fundamental questions such as: How do planetary systems form and evolve? Are there other systems with planets like ours, including potentially habitable planets? The PLATO 2.0 instrument consists of 34 small aperture telescopes (32 with 25 sec readout cadence and 2 with 2.5 sec candence) providing a wide field-of-view (2232 deg2) and a large photometric magnitude range (4-16 mag). It focusses on bright (4-11 mag) stars in wide fields to detect and characterize planets down to Earth-size by photometric transits, whose masses can then be determined by ground-based radial-velocity follow-up measurements. Asteroseismology will be performed for these bright stars to obtain highly accurate stellar parameters, including masses and ages. The combination of bright targets and asteroseismology results in high accuracy for the bulk planet parameters: 2%, 4-10% and 10% for planet radii, masses and ages, respectively. The planned baseline observing strategy includes two long pointings (2-3 years) to detect and bulk characterize planets reaching into the habitable zone (HZ) of solar-like stars and an additional step-and-stare phase to cover in total about 50% of the sky. PLATO 2.0 will observe up to 1,000,000 stars and detect and characterize hundreds of small planets, and thousands of planets in the Neptune to gas giant regime out to the HZ. It will therefore provide the first large-scale catalogue of bulk characterized planets with accurate radii, masses, mean densities and ages. This catalogue will include terrestrial planets at intermediate orbital distances, where surface temperatures are moderate. Coverage of this parameter range with statistical numbers of bulk characterized planets is unique to PLATO 2.0., Comment: 63 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Experimental Astronomy (ExA)
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- 2013
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361. Discovery of WASP-65b and WASP-75b: Two Hot Jupiters Without Highly Inflated Radii
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Chew, Y. Gómez Maqueo, Faedi, F., Pollacco, D., Brown, D. J. A., Doyle, A. P., Cameron, A. Collier, Gillon, M., Lendl, M., Smalley, B., Triaud, A. H. M. J., West, R. G., Wheatley, P. J., Busuttil, R., Liebig, C., Anderson, D. R., Armstrong, D. J., Barros, S. C. C., Bento, J., Bochinski, J., Burwitz, V., Delrez, L., Enoch, B., Fumel, A., Haswell, C. A., Hébrard, G., Hellier, C., Holmes, S., Jehin, E., Kolb, U., Maxted, P. F. L., McCormac, J., Miller, G. R. M., Norton, A. J., Pepe, F., Queloz, D., Rodríguez, J., Ségransan, D., Skillen, I., Stassun, K. G., Udry, S., and Watson, C. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of two transiting hot Jupiters, WASP-65b (M_pl = 1.55 +/- 0.16 M_J; R_pl = 1.11 +/- 0.06 R_J), and WASP-75b (M_pl = 1.07 +/- 0.05 M_J; R_pl = 1.27 +/- 0.05 R_J). They orbit their host star every 2.311, and 2.484 days, respectively. The planet host WASP-65 is a G6 star (T_eff = 5600 K, [Fe/H] = -0.07 +/- 0.07, age > 8 Gyr); WASP-75 is an F9 star (T_eff = 6100 K, [Fe/H] = 0.07 +/- 0.09, age of 3 Gyr). WASP-65b is one of the densest known exoplanets in the mass range 0.1 and 2.0 M_J (rho_pl = 1.13 +/- 0.08 rho_J), a mass range where a large fraction of planets are found to be inflated with respect to theoretical planet models. WASP-65b is one of only a handful of planets with masses of around 1.5 M_J, a mass regime surprisingly underrepresented among the currently known hot Jupiters. The radius of Jupiter-mass WASP-75b is slightly inflated (< 10%) as compared to theoretical planet models with no core, and has a density similar to that of Saturn (rho_pl = 0.52 +/- 0.06 rho_J)., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Version 2 only minor changes; accepted for publication to A&A
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- 2013
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362. Effective Measure of Endogeneity for the Autoregressive Conditional Duration Point Processes via Mapping to the Self-Excited Hawkes Process
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Filimonov, Vladimir, Wheatley, Spencer, and Sornette, Didier
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Quantitative Finance - Statistical Finance - Abstract
In order to disentangle the internal dynamics from exogenous factors within the Autoregressive Conditional Duration (ACD) model, we present an effective measure of endogeneity. Inspired from the Hawkes model, this measure is defined as the average fraction of events that are triggered due to internal feedback mechanisms within the total population. We provide a direct comparison of the Hawkes and ACD models based on numerical simulations and show that our effective measure of endogeneity for the ACD can be mapped onto the "branching ratio" of the Hawkes model.
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- 2013
363. Transmission photometry of WASP-12b: simultaneous measurement of the planetary radius in three bands
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Copperwheat, C. M., Wheatley, P. J., Southworth, J., Bento, J., Marsh, T. R., Dhillon, V. S., Fortney, J. J., Littlefair, S. P., and Hickman, R.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Transmission spectroscopy has been successfully used from both the ground and in space to characterise the atmospheres of transiting exoplanets. This technique is challenging from the ground because ground-based spectrographs tend not to be designed to be photometrically stable, and effects such as variable slit losses cause significant systematic uncertainties. An alternative approach is to use simultaneous photometric observations in multiple wavebands to determine wavelength dependent transit depth differences. We report an application of this technique to one of the hottest known exoplanets, WASP-12b, using the triple-beam camera ULTRACAM. We obtained simultaneous light curves in Sloan u', and two narrow band filters centered on 4169 and 6010 angstroms, with FWHMs 52 and 118 angstroms respectively. We fit these light curves with a photometric model and determine the planetary radius in the three different bands. Our data show no evidence for a difference in planetary radius over the wavelength range we study, and are consistent with an atmosphere that is dominated by Rayleigh scattering from a high altitude haze, as well as more complicated atmosphere models which include the effects of molecules such as TiO. Our planetary radius measurements have an average precision of 2.6 per cent, compared to the ~1.4 - 2.4 per cent radius differences predicted by the models over this wavelength range. We also find a consistent time of ingress and egress across our three wavebands, in contrast to the early ingress which has been reported for this system at shorter wavelengths., Comment: MNRAS accepted. Some minor revisions to the text in response to the reviewer's comments. 10 pages with 2 tables and 4 figures
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- 2013
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364. Superluminous X-rays from a superluminous supernova
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Levan, A. J., Read, A. M., Metzger, B. D., Wheatley, P. J., and Tanvir, N. R.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The discovery of a population of superluminous supernovae (SLSNe), with peak luminosities a factor of ~100 brighter than normal SNe (typically SLSNe have M_V <-21), has shown an unexpected diversity in core-collapse supernova properties. Numerous models have been postulated for the nature of these events, including a strong interaction of the shockwave with a dense circumstellar environment, a re-energizing of the outflow via a central engine, or an origin in the catastrophic destruction of the star following a loss of pressure due to pair production in an extremely massive stellar core (so-called pair instability supernovae). Here we consider constraints that can be placed on the explosion mechanism of Hydrogen-poor SLSNe (SLSNe-I) via X-ray observations, with XMM-Newton, Chandra and Swift, and show that at least one SLSNe-I is likely the brightest X-ray supernovae ever observed, with L_X ~ 10^45 ergs/s, ~150 days after its initial discovery. This is a luminosity 3 orders of magnitude higher than seen in other X-ray supernovae powered via circumstellar interactions. Such high X-ray luminosities are sufficient to ionize the ejecta and markedly reduce the optical depth, making it possible to see deep into the ejecta and any source of emission that resides there. Alternatively, an engine could have powered a moderately relativistic jet external to the ejecta, similar to those seen in gamma-ray bursts. If the detection of X-rays does require an engine it implies that these SNe do create compact objects, and that the stars are not completely destroyed in a pair instability event. Future observations will determine which, if any, of these mechanisms are at play in superluminous supernovae., Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures. Resubmitted to ApJ considering referees comments, originally submitted 22 Jan 2013
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- 2013
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365. WASP-80b: a gas giant transiting a cool dwarf
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Triaud, Amaury H. M. J., Anderson, D. R., Cameron, A. Collier, Doyle, A. P., Fumel, A., Gillon, M., Hellier, C., Jehin, E., Lendl, M., Lovis, C., Maxted, P. F. L., Pepe, F., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Segransan, D., Smalley, B., Smith, A. M. S., Udry, S., West, R. G., and Wheatley, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a planet transiting the star WASP-80 (1SWASP J201240.26-020838.2; 2MASS J20124017-0208391; TYC 5165-481-1; BPM 80815; V=11.9, K=8.4). Our analysis shows this is a 0.55 +/- 0.04 Mjup, 0.95 +/- 0.03 Rjup gas giant on a circular 3.07 day orbit around a star with a spectral type between K7V and M0V. This system produces one of the largest transit depths so far reported, making it a worthwhile target for transmission spectroscopy. We find a large discrepancy between the v sin i inferred from stellar line broadening and the observed amplitude of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect. This can be understood either by an orbital plane nearly perpendicular to the stellar spin or by an additional, unaccounted for source of broadening., Comment: Accepted in A&A, five pages, three figures and one table. RV and photometric data available at the CDS
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- 2013
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366. Screening and development of monoclonal antibodies for identification of ferret T follicular helper cells
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Jiang, Wenbo, Wong, Julius, Tan, Hyon-Xhi, Kelly, Hannah G., Whitney, Paul G., Barr, Ian, Layton, Daniel S., Kent, Stephen J., Wheatley, Adam K., and Juno, Jennifer A.
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- 2021
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367. Immunogenicity of prime-boost protein subunit vaccine strategies against SARS-CoV-2 in mice and macaques
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Tan, Hyon-Xhi, Juno, Jennifer A., Lee, Wen Shi, Barber-Axthelm, Isaac, Kelly, Hannah G., Wragg, Kathleen M., Esterbauer, Robyn, Amarasena, Thakshila, Mordant, Francesca L., Subbarao, Kanta, Kent, Stephen J., and Wheatley, Adam K.
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- 2021
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368. Evolution of immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 in mild-moderate COVID-19
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Wheatley, Adam K., Juno, Jennifer A., Wang, Jing J., Selva, Kevin J., Reynaldi, Arnold, Tan, Hyon-Xhi, Lee, Wen Shi, Wragg, Kathleen M., Kelly, Hannah G., Esterbauer, Robyn, Davis, Samantha K., Kent, Helen E., Mordant, Francesca L., Schlub, Timothy E., Gordon, David L., Khoury, David S., Subbarao, Kanta, Cromer, Deborah, Gordon, Tom P., Chung, Amy W., Davenport, Miles P., and Kent, Stephen J.
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- 2021
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369. Immune cellular networks underlying recovery from influenza virus infection in acute hospitalized patients
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Nguyen, Thi H. O., Koutsakos, Marios, van de Sandt, Carolien E., Crawford, Jeremy Chase, Loh, Liyen, Sant, Sneha, Grzelak, Ludivine, Allen, Emma K., Brahm, Tim, Clemens, E. Bridie, Auladell, Maria, Hensen, Luca, Wang, Zhongfang, Nüssing, Simone, Jia, Xiaoxiao, Günther, Patrick, Wheatley, Adam K., Kent, Stephen J., Aban, Malet, Deng, Yi-Mo, Laurie, Karen L., Hurt, Aeron C., Gras, Stephanie, Rossjohn, Jamie, Crowe, Jane, Xu, Jianqing, Jackson, David, Brown, Lorena E., La Gruta, Nicole, Chen, Weisan, Doherty, Peter C., Turner, Stephen J., Kotsimbos, Tom C., Thomas, Paul G., Cheng, Allen C., and Kedzierska, Katherine
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- 2021
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370. Origin of the enhanced Nb3Sn performance by combined Hf and Ta doping
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Tarantini, Chiara, Kametani, Fumitake, Balachandran, Shreyas, Heald, Steve M., Wheatley, Laura, Grovenor, Chris R. M., Moody, Michael P., Su, Yi-Feng, Lee, Peter J., and Larbalestier, David C.
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- 2021
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371. The thalamus in trigeminal neuralgia: structural and metabolic abnormalities, and influence on surgical response
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Danyluk, Hayden, Andrews, Jennifer, Kesarwani, Rohit, Seres, Peter, Broad, Robert, Wheatley, B. Matt, and Sankar, Tejas
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- 2021
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372. Polθ inhibitors elicit BRCA-gene synthetic lethality and target PARP inhibitor resistance
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Zatreanu, Diana, Robinson, Helen M. R., Alkhatib, Omar, Boursier, Marie, Finch, Harry, Geo, Lerin, Grande, Diego, Grinkevich, Vera, Heald, Robert A., Langdon, Sophie, Majithiya, Jayesh, McWhirter, Claire, Martin, Niall M. B., Moore, Shaun, Neves, Joana, Rajendra, Eeson, Ranzani, Marco, Schaedler, Theresia, Stockley, Martin, Wiggins, Kimberley, Brough, Rachel, Sridhar, Sandhya, Gulati, Aditi, Shao, Nan, Badder, Luned M., Novo, Daniela, Knight, Eleanor G., Marlow, Rebecca, Haider, Syed, Callen, Elsa, Hewitt, Graeme, Schimmel, Joost, Prevo, Remko, Alli, Christina, Ferdinand, Amanda, Bell, Cameron, Blencowe, Peter, Bot, Chris, Calder, Mathew, Charles, Mark, Curry, Jayne, Ekwuru, Tennyson, Ewings, Katherine, Krajewski, Wojciech, MacDonald, Ellen, McCarron, Hollie, Pang, Leon, Pedder, Chris, Rigoreau, Laurent, Swarbrick, Martin, Wheatley, Ed, Willis, Simon, Wong, Ai Ching, Nussenzweig, Andre, Tijsterman, Marcel, Tutt, Andrew, Boulton, Simon J., Higgins, Geoff S., Pettitt, Stephen J., Smith, Graeme C. M., and Lord, Christopher J.
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- 2021
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373. The effect of a one-year vigorous physical activity intervention on fitness, cognitive performance and mental health in young adolescents: the Fit to Study cluster randomised controlled trial
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Wassenaar, T. M., Wheatley, C. M., Beale, N., Nichols, T., Salvan, P., Meaney, A., Atherton, K., Diaz-Ordaz, K., Dawes, H., and Johansen-Berg, H.
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- 2021
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374. Identification of high risk and early stage eating disorders: first validation of a digital screening tool
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Bryant, Emma, Miskovic-Wheatley, Jane, Touyz, Stephen W., Crosby, Ross D., Koreshe, Eyza, and Maguire, Sarah
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- 2021
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375. Systems serology detects functionally distinct coronavirus antibody features in children and elderly
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Selva, Kevin J., van de Sandt, Carolien E., Lemke, Melissa M., Lee, Christina Y., Shoffner, Suzanne K., Chua, Brendon Y., Davis, Samantha K., Nguyen, Thi H. O., Rowntree, Louise C., Hensen, Luca, Koutsakos, Marios, Wong, Chinn Yi, Mordant, Francesca, Jackson, David C., Flanagan, Katie L., Crowe, Jane, Tosif, Shidan, Neeland, Melanie R., Sutton, Philip, Licciardi, Paul V., Crawford, Nigel W., Cheng, Allen C., Doolan, Denise L., Amanat, Fatima, Krammer, Florian, Chappell, Keith, Modhiran, Naphak, Watterson, Daniel, Young, Paul, Lee, Wen Shi, Wines, Bruce D., Mark Hogarth, P., Esterbauer, Robyn, Kelly, Hannah G., Tan, Hyon-Xhi, Juno, Jennifer A., Wheatley, Adam K., Kent, Stephen J., Arnold, Kelly B., Kedzierska, Katherine, and Chung, Amy W.
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- 2021
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376. Rapid evolution and host immunity drive the rise and fall of carbapenem resistance during an acute Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection
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Wheatley, Rachel, Diaz Caballero, Julio, Kapel, Natalia, de Winter, Fien H. R., Jangir, Pramod, Quinn, Angus, del Barrio-Tofiño, Ester, López-Causapé, Carla, Hedge, Jessica, Torrens, Gabriel, Van der Schalk, Thomas, Xavier, Basil Britto, Fernández-Cuenca, Felipe, Arenzana, Angel, Recanatini, Claudia, Timbermont, Leen, Sifakis, Frangiscos, Ruzin, Alexey, Ali, Omar, Lammens, Christine, Goossens, Herman, Kluytmans, Jan, Kumar-Singh, Samir, Oliver, Antonio, Malhotra-Kumar, Surbhi, and MacLean, Craig
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- 2021
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377. Supported online cognitive behavioural therapy for bulimia nervosa: a study protocol of a randomised controlled trial
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Barakat, Sarah, Touyz, Stephen, Maloney, Danielle, Russell, Janice, Hay, Phillipa, Cunich, Michelle, Lymer, Sharyn, Kim, Marcellinus, Madden, Sloane, Miskovic-Wheatley, Jane, and Maguire, Sarah
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- 2021
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378. The Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS)
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Wheatley, Peter J., Pollacco, Don L., Queloz, Didier, Rauer, Heike, Watson, Christopher A., West, Richard G., Chazelas, Bruno, Louden, Tom M., Walker, Simon, Bannister, Nigel, Bento, Joao, Burleigh, Matthew, Cabrera, Juan, Eigmueller, Philipp, Erikson, Anders, Genolet, Ludovic, Goad, Michael, Grange, Andrew, Jordan, Andres, Lawrie, Katherine, McCormac, James, and Neveu, Marion
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS) is a new ground-based sky survey designed to find transiting Neptunes and super-Earths. By covering at least sixteen times the sky area of Kepler we will find small planets around stars that are sufficiently bright for radial velocity confirmation, mass determination and atmospheric characterisation. The NGTS instrument will consist of an array of twelve independently pointed 20cm telescopes fitted with red-sensitive CCD cameras. It will be constructed at the ESO Paranal Observatory, thereby benefiting from the very best photometric conditions as well as follow up synergy with the VLT and E-ELT. Our design has been verified through the operation of two prototype instruments, demonstrating white noise characteristics to sub-mmag photometric precision. Detailed simulations show that about thirty bright super-Earths and up to two hundred Neptunes could be discovered. Our science operations are due to begin in 2014., Comment: Submitted to the conference proceedings of the RoPACS meeting "Hot Planets and Cool Stars" (Nov. 2012, Garching), 4 pages, 2 colour figures
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- 2013
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379. Atmospheric escape from HD 189733b observed in HI Lyman-alpha: detailed analysis of HST/STIS September 2011 observations
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Bourrier, Vincent, Etangs, Alain Lecavelier des, Dupuy, Hélène, Ehrenreich, David, Vidal-Madjar, Alfred, Hébrard, Guillaume, Ballester, Gilda E., Désert, Jean-Michel, Ferlet, Roger, Sing, David K., and Wheatley, Peter J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of transits of the hot giant exoplanet HD 189733b in the unresolved HI Lyman-alpha line show signs of hydrogen escaping the upper atmosphere of the planet. New resolved Lyman-alpha observations obtained with the STIS spectrograph onboard the Hubble Space Telescope in April 2010 and September 2011 confirmed that the planet is evaporating, and furthermore discovered significant temporal variations in the physical conditions of its evaporating atmosphere. Here we present a detailed analysis of the September 2011 observations of HD 189733b, when an atmospheric signature was detected. We present specific methods to find and characterize this absorption signature of escaping hydrogen in the Lyman-alpha line, and to calculate its false-positive probability, found to be 3.6%. Taking advantage of the spectral resolution and high sensitivity of the STIS spectrograph, we also present new results on temporal and spectro-temporal variability of this absorption feature. We also report the observation of HD 189733b in other lines (SiIII at 1206.5A, NV at 1240A). Variations in these lines could be explained either by early occultation by a bow-shock rich in highly ionized species, or by stellar variations., Comment: 14 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2013
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380. Near-UV Absorption, Chromospheric Activity, and Star-Planet Interactions in the WASP-12 system
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Haswell, C. A., Fossati, L., Ayres, T., France, K., Froning, C. S., Holmes, S., Kolb, U. C., Busuttil, R., Street, R. A., Hebb, L., Cameron, A. Collier, Enoch, B., Burwitz, V., Rodriguez, J., West, R. G., Pollacco, D., Wheatley, P. J., and Carter, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We observed the extreme close-in hot Jupiter system WASP-12 with HST. Near-UV transits up to three times deeper than the optical transit of WASP-12b reveal extensive diffuse gas, extending well beyond the Roche lobe. The distribution of absorbing gas varies between visits. The deepest NUV transits are at wavelength ranges with strong photospheric absorption, implying the absorbing gas may have temperature and composition similar to the stellar photosphere. Our spectra reveal significantly enhanced absorption (greater than 3 \sigma below the median) at ~200 wavelengths on each of two HST visits; 65 of these wavelengths are consistent between the two visits, using a strict criterion for velocity matching which excludes matches with velocity shifts exceeding ~20 km/s. Excess transit depths are robustly detected throughout the inner wings of the MgII resonance lines independently on both HST visits. We detected absorption in FeII 2586A, the heaviest species yet detected in an exoplanet transit. The MgII line cores have zero flux, emission cores exhibited by every other observed star of similar age and spectral type are conspicuously absent. WASP-12 probably produces normal MgII profiles, but the inner portions of these strong resonance lines are likely affected by extrinsic absorption. The required Mg+ column is an order of magnitude greater than expected from the ISM, though we cannot completely dismiss that possibility. A more plausible source of absorption is gas lost by WASP-12b. We show that planetary mass loss can produce the required column. Our Visit 2 NUV light curves show evidence for a stellar flare. We show that some of the possible transit detections in resonance lines of rare elements may be due instead to non-resonant transitions in common species. We present optical observations and update the transit ephemeris., Comment: 79 pages, 23 figures, published in ApJ "replaced" version is identical except for corrected punctuation in the arXiv abstract
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- 2013
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381. X-ray Luminosities of Optically-Selected Cataclysmic Variables and Application to the Galactic Ridge X-ray Emission
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Reis, R. C., Wheatley, P. J., Gansicke, B. T., and Osborne, J. P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
By studying Swift X-ray spectra of an optically-selected, non-magnetic sample of nearby cataclysmic variables (CVs), we show that there is a population with X-ray luminosity much lower than accounted for in existing studies. We find an average 0.5-10.0 keV luminosity of $8\times10^{29}\ergps$ which is an order of magnitude lower than observed in previous samples. Looking at the co-added X-ray spectrum of twenty CVs, we show that the spectral properties of this optically-selected, low X-ray luminosity sample -- likely characteristic of the dominant population of CVs -- resembles that of their brighter counterpart, as well as the X-ray emission originating in the Galactic ridge. It is argued that if the space density of CVs is greater than the current estimates, as it is indeed predicted by population synthesis models, then CVs can significantly contribute to the Galactic ridge emission., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 8 pages, 5 figures
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- 2013
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382. WASP-52b, WASP-58b, WASP-59b, and WASP-60b: four new transiting close-in giant planets
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Hebrard, G., Cameron, A. Collier, Brown, D. J. A., Diaz, R. F., Faedi, F., Smalley, B., Anderson, D. R., Armstrong, D., Barros, S. C. C., Bento, J., Bouchy, F., Doyle, A. P., Enoch, B., Chew, Y. Gomez Maqueo, Hebrard, E. M., Hellier, C., Lendl, M., Lister, T. A., Maxted, P. F. L., McCormac, J., Moutou, C., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Santerne, A., Skillen, I., Southworth, J., Tregloan-Reed, J., Triaud, A. H. M. J., Udry, S., Vanhuysse, M., Watson, C. A., West, R. G., and Wheatley, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of four new transiting hot jupiters, detected mainly from SuperWASP-North and SOPHIE observations. These new planets, WASP-52b, WASP-58b, WASP-59b, and WASP-60b, have orbital periods ranging from 1.7 to 7.9 days, masses between 0.46 and 0.94 M_Jup, and radii between 0.73 and 1.49 R_Jup. Their G1 to K5 dwarf host stars have V magnitudes in the range 11.7-13.0. The depths of the transits are between 0.6 and 2.7%, depending on the target. With their large radii, WASP-52b and 58b are new cases of low-density, inflated planets, whereas WASP-59b is likely to have a large, dense core. WASP-60 shows shallow transits. In the case of WASP-52 we also detected the Rossiter-McLaughlin anomaly via time-resolved spectroscopy of a transit. We measured the sky-projected obliquity lambda = 24 (+17/-9) degrees, indicating that WASP-52b orbits in the same direction as its host star is rotating and that this prograde orbit is slightly misaligned with the stellar equator. These four new planetary systems increase our statistics on hot jupiters, and provide new targets for follow-up studies., Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2012
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383. WASP-54b, WASP-56b and WASP-57b: Three new sub-Jupiter mass planets from SuperWASP
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Faedi, F., Pollacco, D., Barros, S. C. C., Brown, D., Cameron, A. Collier, Doyle, A. P., Enoch, R., Gillon, M., Chew, Y. Gomez Maqueo, Hebrard, G., Lendl, M., Liebig, C., Smalley, B., Triaud, A. H. M. J., West, R. G., Wheatley, P. J., Alsubai, K. A., Anderson, D. R., Armstrong, D. J., Bento, J., Bochinski, J., Bouchy, F., Busuttil, R., Fossati, L., Fumel, A., Haswell, C. A., Hellier, C., Holmes, S., Jehin, E., Kolb, U., McCormac, J., Miller, G. R. M., Moutou, C., Norton, A. J., Parley, N., Queloz, D., Santerne, A., Skillen, I., Smith, A. M. S., Udry, S., and Watson, C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present three newly discovered sub-Jupiter mass planets from the SuperWASP survey: WASP-54b is a heavily bloated planet of mass 0.636$^{+0.025}_{-0.024}$ \mj and radius 1.653$^{+0.090}_{-0.083}$ \rj. It orbits a F9 star, evolving off the main sequence, every 3.69 days. Our MCMC fit of the system yields a slightly eccentric orbit ($e=0.067^{+0.033}_{-0.025}$) for WASP-54b. We investigated further the veracity of our detection of the eccentric orbit for WASP-54b, and we find that it could be real. However, given the brightness of WASP-54 V=10.42 magnitudes, we encourage observations of a secondary eclipse to draw robust conclusions on both the orbital eccentricity and the thermal structure of the planet. WASP-56b and WASP-57b have masses of 0.571$^{+0.034}_{-0.035}$ \mj and $0.672^{+0.049}_{-0.046}$ \mj, respectively; and radii of $1.092^{+0.035}_{-0.033}$ \rj for WASP-56b and $0.916^{+0.017}_{-0.014}$ \rj for WASP-57b. They orbit main sequence stars of spectral type G6 every 4.67 and 2.84 days, respectively. WASP-56b and WASP-57b show no radius anomaly and a high density possibly implying a large core of heavy elements; possibly as high as $\sim$50 M$_{\oplus}$ in the case of WASP-57b. However, the composition of the deep interior of exoplanets remain still undetermined. Thus, more exoplanet discoveries such as the ones presented in this paper, are needed to understand and constrain giant planets' physical properties., Comment: 15pages, 19 figures, Submitted to A&A 8-10-2012 Accepted for publication 23-12-2012
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- 2012
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384. Hint of a transiting extended atmosphere on 55 Cancri b
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Ehrenreich, David, Bourrier, Vincent, Bonfils, Xavier, Etangs, Alain Lecavelier des, Hébrard, Guillaume, Sing, David K., Wheatley, Peter J., Vidal-Madjar, Alfred, Delfosse, Xavier, Udry, Stéphane, Forveille, Thierry, and Moutou, Claire
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The naked-eye star 55 Cancri hosts a planetary system with five known planets, including a hot super-Earth (55 Cnc e) extremely close to its star and a farther out giant planet (55 Cnc b), found in milder irradiation conditions with respect to other known hot Jupiters. This system raises important questions on the evolution of atmospheres for close-in exoplanets, and the dependence with planetary mass and irradiation. These questions can be addressed by Lyman-alpha transit observations of the extended hydrogen planetary atmospheres, complemented by contemporaneous measurements of the stellar X-ray flux. In fact, planet `e' has been detected in transit, suggesting the system is seen nearly edge-on. Yet, planet `b' has not been observed in transit so far. Here, we report on Hubble Space Telescope STIS Lyman-alpha and Chandra ACIS-S X-ray observations of 55 Cnc. These simultaneous observations cover two transits of 55 Cnc e and two inferior conjunctions of 55 Cnc b. They reveal the star as a bright Lyman-alpha target and a variable X-ray source. While no significant signal is detected during the transits of 55 Cnc e, we detect a surprising Lyman-alpha absorption of 7.5 +/- 1.8% (4.2 sigma) at inferior conjunctions of 55 Cnc b. The absorption is only detected over the range of Doppler velocities where the stellar radiation repels hydrogen atoms towards the observer. We calculate a false-alarm probability of 4.4%, which takes into account the a-priori unknown transit parameters. This result suggests the possibility that 55 Cnc b has an extended upper H I atmosphere, which undergoes partial transits when the planet grazes the stellar disc. If confirmed, it would show that planets cooler than hot Jupiters can also have extended atmospheres., Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2012
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385. Quantum-enhanced optical phase tracking
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Yonezawa, Hidehiro, Nakane, Daisuke, Wheatley, Trevor A., Iwasawa, Kohjiro, Takeda, Shuntaro, Arao, Hajime, Ohki, Kentaro, Tsumura, Koji, Berry, Dominic W., Ralph, Timothy C., Wiseman, Howard M., Huntington, Elanor H., and Furusawa, Akira
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Tracking a randomly varying optical phase is a key task in metrology, with applications in optical communication. The best precision for optical phase tracking has till now been limited by the quantum vacuum fluctuations of coherent light. Here we surpass this coherent-state limit by using a continuous-wave beam in a phase-squeezed quantum state. Unlike in previous squeezing-enhanced metrology, restricted to phases with very small variation, the best tracking precision (for a fixed light intensity) is achieved for a finite degree of squeezing, due to Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. By optimizing the squeezing we track the phase with a mean square error 15 \pm 4 % below the coherent-state limit., Comment: 33 pages, 12 fugres
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- 2012
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386. LOFT: the Large Observatory For X-ray Timing
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Feroci, M., Herder, J. W. den, Bozzo, E., Barret, D., Brandt, S., Hernanz, M., van der Klis, M., Pohl, M., Santangelo, A., Stella, L., Watts, A., Wilms, J., Zane, S., Ahangarianabhari, M., Alpar, A., Altamirano, D., Alvarez, L., Amati, L., Amoros, C., Andersson, N., Antonelli, A., Argan, A., Artigue, R., Azzarello, P., Baldazzi, G., Balman, S., Barbera, M., Belloni, T., Bertuccio, G., Bianchi, S., Bianchini, A., Bodin, P., Bidaud, J. -M. Bonnet, Boutloukos, S., Braga, J., Brown, E., Bucciantini, N., Burderi, L., Bursa, M., Budtz-Jørgensen, C., Cackett, E., Cadoux, F. R., Cais, P., Caliandro, G. A., Campana, R., Campana, S., Casella, P., Chakrabarty, D., Chenevez, J., Coker, J., Cole, R., Collura, A., Courvoisier, T., Cros, A., Cumming, A., Cusumano, G., D'Aì, A., D'Elia, V., Del Monte, E., De Martino, D., De Rosa, A., Di Cosimo, S., Diebold, S., Di Salvo, T., Donnarumma, I., Drago, A., Durant, M., Emmanoulopoulos, D., Evangelista, Y., Fabian, A., Falanga, M., Favre, Y., Feldman, C., Ferrigno, C., Finger, M. H., Fraser, G. W., Fuschino, F., Galloway, D. K., Sanchez, J. L. Galvez, Garcia-Berro, E., Gendre, B., Gezari, S., Giles, A. B., Gilfanov, M., Giommi, P., Giovannini, G., Giroletti, M., Goldwurm, A., Götz, D., Gouiffes, C., Grassi, M., Guidorzi, P. Groot C., Haas, D., Hansen, F., Hartmann, D. H., Haswe, C. A., Heger, A., Homan, J., Hornstrup, A., Hudec, R., Huovelin, J., Ingram, A., Zand, J. J. M. in't, Isern, J., Israe, G., Izzo, L., Jonker, P., Kaaret, P., Karas, V., Karelin, D., Kataria, D., Keek, L., Kennedy, T., Klochkov, D., Kluzniak, W., Kokkotas, K., Korpela, S., Kouveliotou, C., Kreykenbohm, I., Kuiper, L. M., Kuvvetli, I., Labanti, C., Lai, D., Lamb, F. K., Lebrun, F., Lin, D., Linder, D., Lodato, G., Longo, F., Lund, N., Maccarone, T. J., Macera, D., Maier, D., Malcovati, P., Mangano, V., Manousakis, A., Marisaldi, M., Markowitz, A., Martindale, A., Matt, G., McHardy, I. M., Melatos, A., Mendez, M., Migliari, S., Mignani, R., Miller, M. C., Miller, J. M., Mineo, T., Miniutti, G., Morsink, S., Motch, C., Motta, S., Mouchet, M., Muleri, F., Norton, A. J., Nowak, M., O'Brien, P., Orienti, M., Orio, M., Orlandini, M., Orleanski, P., Osborne, J. P., Osten, R., Ozel, F., Pacciani, L., Papitto, A., Paul, B., Perinati, E., Petracek, V., Portell, J., Poutanen, J., Psaltis, D., Rambaud, D., Ramsay, G., Rapisarda, M., Rachevski, A., Ray, P. S., Rea, N., Reddy, S., Reig, P., Aranda, M. Reina, Remillard, R., Reynolds, C., Rodríguez-Gil, P., Rodriguez, J., Romano, P., Rossi, E. M. R., Ryde, F., Sabau-Graziati, L., Sala, G., Salvaterra, R., Sanna, A., Schanne, S., Schee, J., Schmid, C., Schwenk, A., Schwope, A. D., Seyler, J. -Y., Shearer, A., Smith, A., Smith, D. M., Smith, P. J., Sochora, V., Soffitta, P., Soleri, P., Stappers, B., Stelzer, B., Stergioulas, N., Stratta, G., Strohmayer, T. E., Stuchlik, Z., Suchy, S., Sulemainov, V., Takahashi, T., Tamburini, F., Tenzer, C., Tolos, L., Torok, G., Torrejon, J. M., Torres, D. F., Tramacere, A., Trois, A., Turriziani, S., Uter, P., Uttley, P., Vacchi, A., Varniere, P., Vaughan, S., Vercellone, S., Vrba, V., Walton, D., Watanabe, S., Wawrzaszek, R., Webb, N., Weinberg, N., Wende, H., Wheatley, P., Wijers, R., Wijnands, R., Wille, M., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., Winter, B., Wood, K., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., Zampieri, L., Zdziarski, A., and Zhang, B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The LOFT mission concept is one of four candidates selected by ESA for the M3 launch opportunity as Medium Size missions of the Cosmic Vision programme. The launch window is currently planned for between 2022 and 2024. LOFT is designed to exploit the diagnostics of rapid X-ray flux and spectral variability that directly probe the motion of matter down to distances very close to black holes and neutron stars, as well as the physical state of ultra-dense matter. These primary science goals will be addressed by a payload composed of a Large Area Detector (LAD) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a collimated (<1 degree field of view) experiment operating in the energy range 2-50 keV, with a 10 m^2 peak effective area and an energy resolution of 260 eV at 6 keV. The WFM will operate in the same energy range as the LAD, enabling simultaneous monitoring of a few-steradian wide field of view, with an angular resolution of <5 arcmin. The LAD and WFM experiments will allow us to investigate variability from submillisecond QPO's to year-long transient outbursts. In this paper we report the current status of the project., Comment: Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 8443, Paper No. 8443-85, 2012
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- 2012
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387. IPHAS J062746.41+014811.3: a deeply eclipsing intermediate polar
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Aungwerojwit, A., Gänsicke, B. T., Wheatley, P. J., Pyrzas, S., Staels, B., Krajci, T., and Rodríguez-Gil, P.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present time-resolved photometry of a cataclysmic variable discovered in the Isaac Newton Telescope Photometric Halpha Survey of the northern galactic plane, IPHAS J062746.41+014811.3 and classify the system as the fourth deeply eclipsing intermediate polar known with an orbital period of Porb=8.16 h, and spin period of Pspin=2210 s. The system shows mild variations of its brightness, that appear to be accompanied by a change in the amplitude of the spin modulation at optical wavelengths, and a change in the morphology of the eclipse profile. The inferred magnetic moment of the white dwarf is mu_wd = 6-7 x 10^33 Gcm^3, and in this case IPHAS J0627 will either evolve into a short-period EX Hya-like intermediate polar with a large Pspin\Porb ratio, or, perhaps more likely, into a synchronised polar. Swift observations show that the system is an ultraviolet and X-ray source, with a hard X-ray spectrum that is consistent with those seen in other intermediate polars. The ultraviolet light curve shows orbital modulation and an eclipse, while the low signal-to-noise ratio X-ray light curve does not show a significant modulation on the spin period. The measured X-ray flux is about an order of magnitude lower than would be expected from scaling by the optical fluxes of well-known X-ray selected intermediate polars., Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2012
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388. Suppression of X-rays during an optical outburst of the helium dwarf nova KL Dra
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Ramsay, Gavin, Wheatley, Peter J., Rosen, Simon, Barclay, Thomas, and Steeghs, Danny
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
KL Dra is a helium accreting AM CVn binary system with an orbital period close to 25 mins. Approximately every 60 days there is a 4 mag optical outburst lasting ~10 days. We present the most sensitive X-ray observations made of an AM CVn system during an outburst cycle. A series of eight observations were made using XMM-Newton which started shortly after the onset of an optical outburst. We find that X-rays are suppressed during the optical outburst. There is some evidence for a spectral evolution of the X-ray spectrum during the course of the outburst. A periodic modulation is seen in the UV data at three epochs -- this is a signature of the binary orbital or the super-hump period. The temperature of the X-ray emitting plasma is cooler compared to dwarf novae, which may suggest a wind is the origin of a significant fraction of the X-ray flux., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS
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- 2012
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389. Temporal variations in the evaporating atmosphere of the exoplanet HD 189733b
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Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Bourrier, V., Wheatley, P. J., Dupuy, H., Ehrenreich, D., Vidal-Madjar, A., Hébrard, G., Ballester, G. E., Désert, J. -M., Ferlet, R., and Sing, D. K.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Atmospheric escape has been detected from the exoplanet HD 209458b through transit observations of the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line. Here we present spectrally resolved Lyman-alpha transit observations of the exoplanet HD 189733b at two different epochs. These HST/STIS observations show for the first time, that there are significant temporal variations in the physical conditions of an evaporating planetary atmosphere. While atmospheric hydrogen is not detected in the first epoch observations, it is observed at the second epoch, producing a transit absorption depth of 14.4+/-3.6% between velocities of -230 to -140 km/s. Contrary to HD 209458b, these high velocities cannot arise from radiation pressure alone and require an additional acceleration mechanism, such as interactions with stellar wind protons. The observed absorption can be explained by an atmospheric escape rate of neutral hydrogen atoms of about 10^9 g/s, a stellar wind with a velocity of 190 km/s and a temperature of ~10^5K. An X-ray flare from the active star seen with Swift/XRT 8 hours before the second-epoch observation supports the idea that the observed changes within the upper atmosphere of the planet can be caused by variations in the stellar wind properties, or by variations in the stellar energy input to the planetary escaping gas (or a mix of the two effects). These observations provide the first indication of interaction between the exoplanet's atmosphere and stellar variations., Comment: To be published in A&A Letters, June 28, 2012
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- 2012
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390. WASP-42 b and WASP-49 b: two new transiting sub-Jupiters
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Lendl, M., Anderson, D. R., Collier-Cameron, A., Doyle, A. P., Gillon, M., Hellier, C., Jehin, E., Lister, T. A., Maxted, P. F. L., Pepe, F., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Smalley, B., Segransan, D., Smith, A. M. S., Triaud, A. H. M. J., Udry, S., West, R. G., and Wheatley, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of two new transiting planets from the WASP survey. WASP-42 b is a 0.500 +/- 0.035 M_jup planet orbiting a K1 star at a separation of 0.0548 +/- 0.0017 AU with a period of 4.9816872 +/- 7.3 x 10^-6 days. The radius of WASP-42 b is 1.080 +/- 0.057 R_jup while its equilibrium temperature is T_eq = 995 +/- 34 K. We detect some evidence for a small but non-zero eccentricity of e=0.060 +/- 0.013. WASP-49 b is a 0.378 +/- 0.027 M_jup planet around an old G6 star. It has a period of 2.7817387 +/- 5.6 x 10^-6 days and a separation of 0.0379 +/- 0.0011 AU. This planet is slightly bloated, having a radius of 1.115 +/- 0.047 R_jup and an equilibrium temperature of T_eq = 1369 +/- 39 K. Both planets have been followed up photometrically, and in total we have obtained 5 full and one partial transit light curves of WASP-42 and 4 full and one partial light curves of WASP-49 using the Euler-Swiss, TRAPPIST and Faulkes South telescopes.
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- 2012
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391. Thermal emission from WASP-24b at 3.6 and 4.5 {\mu}m
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Smith, A. M. S., Anderson, D. R., Madhusudhan, N., Southworth, J., Cameron, A. Collier, Blecic, J., Harrington, J., Hellier, C., Maxted, P. F. L., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Smalley, B., Triaud, A. H. M . J., and Wheatley, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims. We observe occultations of WASP-24b to measure brightness temperatures and to determine whether or not its atmosphere exhibits a thermal inversion (stratosphere). Methods. We observed occultations of WASP-24b at 3.6 and 4.5 {\mu}m using the Spitzer Space Telescope. It has been suggested that there is a correlation between stellar activity and the presence of inversions, so we analysed existing HARPS spectra in order to calculate log R'HK for WASP-24 and thus determine whether or not the star is chromospherically active. We also observed a transit of WASP-24b in the Str\"{o}mgren u and y bands, with the CAHA 2.2-m telescope. Results. We measure occultation depths of 0.159 \pm 0.013 per cent at 3.6 {\mu}m and 0.202 \pm 0.018 per cent at 4.5 {\mu}m. The corresponding planetary brightness temperatures are 1974 \pm 71 K and 1944 \pm 85 K respectively. Atmosphere models with and without a thermal inversion fit the data equally well; we are unable to constrain the presence of an inversion without additional occultation measurements in the near-IR. We find log R'HK = -4.98 \pm 0.12, indicating that WASP-24 is not a chromospherically active star. Our global analysis of new and previously-published data has refined the system parameters, and we find no evidence that the orbit of WASP-24b is non-circular. Conclusions. These results emphasise the importance of complementing Spitzer measurements with observations at shorter wavelengths to gain a full understanding of hot Jupiter atmospheres., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2012
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392. Physical properties and radius variations in the HAT-P-5 planetary system from simultaneous four-colour photometry
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Southworth, John, Mancini, L., Maxted, P. F. L., Bruni, I., Tregloan-Reed, J., Barbieri, M., Ruocco, N., and Wheatley, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The radii of giant planets, as measured from transit observations, may vary with wavelength due to Rayleigh scattering or variations in opacity. Such an effect is predicted to be large enough to detect using ground-based observations at multiple wavelengths. We present defocussed photometry of a transit in the HAT-P-5 system, obtained simultaneously through Stromgren u, Gunn g and r, and Johnson I filters. Two more transit events were observed through a Gunn r filter. We detect a substantially larger planetary radius in u, but the effect is greater than predicted using theoretical model atmospheres of gaseous planets. This phenomenon is most likely to be due to systematic errors present in the u-band photometry, stemming from variations in the transparency of Earth's atmosphere at these short wavelengths. We use our data to calculate an improved orbital ephemeris and to refine the measured physical properties of the system. The planet HAT-P-5b has a mass of 1.06 +/- 0.11 +/- 0.01 Mjup and a radius of 1.252 +/- 0.042 +/- 0.008 Rjup (statistical and systematic errors respectively), making it slightly larger than expected according to standard models of coreless gas-giant planets. Its equilibrium temperature of 1517 +/- 29 K is within 60K of that of the extensively-studied planet HD 209458b., Comment: Version 2 corrects the accidental omission of one author in the arXiv metadata. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 9 pages, 4 figures, 7 tables. The properties of HAT-P-5 have been added to the Transiting Extrasolar Planet Catalogue at http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~jkt/tepcat/
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- 2012
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393. Islands of Sanity.
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WHEATLEY, MARGARET J.
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IDENTITY (Psychology) ,CRIMES against students ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) ,CIVIL rights workers - Abstract
The article discusses the challenges faced by educational leaders in the current climate of attacks on public education. It emphasizes the need for leaders to create "islands of sanity" - protected spaces that foster community, resilience, and a sense of purpose. The article provides examples of schools that have successfully navigated crises by maintaining a strong identity, open communication, and a focus on mission and purpose. It concludes by encouraging leaders to create the conditions for generosity, creativity, and kindness to thrive, and to persevere as refugia in the face of opposition. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
394. Thermal emission at 3.6-8 micron from WASP-19b: a hot Jupiter without a stratosphere orbiting an active star
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Anderson, D. R., Smith, A. M. S., Madhusudhan, N., Wheatley, P. J., Cameron, A. Collier, Hellier, C., Campo, C., Gillon, M., Harrington, J., Maxted, P. F. L., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Smalley, B., Triaud, A. H. M. J., and West, R. G.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report detection of thermal emission from the exoplanet WASP-19b at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8 and 8.0 micron. We used the InfraRed Array Camera on the Spitzer Space Telescope to observe two occultations of WASP-19b by its host star. We combine our new detections with previous measurements of WASP-19b's emission at 1.6 and 2.09 micron to construct a spectral energy distribution of the planet's dayside atmosphere. By comparing this with model-atmosphere spectra, we find that the dayside atmosphere of WASP-19b lacks a strong temperature inversion. As WASP-19 is an active star (log RHK = -4.50 +/- 0.03), this finding supports the hypothesis of Knutson, Howard & Isaacson (2010) that inversions are suppressed in hot Jupiters orbiting active stars. The available data are unable to differentiate between a carbon-rich and an oxygen-rich atmosphere., Comment: As accepted for publication in MNRAS. 12 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables
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- 2011
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395. The coronal X-ray - age relation and its implications for the evaporation of exoplanets
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Jackson, Alan P., Davis, Timothy A., and Wheatley, Peter J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the relationship between coronal X-ray emission and stellar age for late-type stars, and the variation of this relationship with spectral type. We select 717 stars from 13 open clusters and find that the ratio of X-ray to bolometric luminosity during the saturated phase of coronal emission decreases from 10^-3.1 for late K-dwarfs to 10^-4.3 for early F-type stars (across the range 0.29<(B-V)_0<1.41). Our determined saturation timescales vary between 10^7.6 and 10^8.3 years, though with no clear trend across the whole FGK range. We apply our X-ray emission - age relations to the investigation of the evaporation history of 121 known transiting exoplanets using a simple energy-limited model of evaporation and taking into consideration Roche lobe effects and different heating/evaporation efficiencies. We confirm that a linear cut-off of the planet distribution in the M^2/R^3 versus a^-2 plane is an expected result of population modification by evaporation and that the known transiting exoplanets display such a cut-off. We find that for an evaporation efficiency of 25% we expect around 1 in 10 of the known transiting exoplanets to have lost > 5% of their mass since formation. In addition we provide estimates of the minimum formation mass for which a planet could be expected to survive for 4 Gyrs for a range of stellar and planetary parameters. We emphasise the importance of the earliest periods of a planet's life for its evaporation history with 75% expected to occur within the first Gyr. This raises the possibility of using evaporation histories to distinguish between different migration scenarios. For planets with available spin-orbit angles no difference is found between the distributions of planets with misaligned orbits and those with aligned orbits. This suggests that misalignment occurs early in the life of the planetary system, though more data is needed., Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, accepted by MNRAS. Full versions of Tables 3, 4 and 5 available with the online journal version
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- 2011
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396. The long term optical behaviour of helium accreting AM CVn binaries
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Ramsay, Gavin, Barclay, Thomas, Steeghs, Danny, Wheatley, Peter J., Hakala, Pasi, Kotko, Iwona, and Rosen, Simon
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a two and a half year optical photometric monitoring programme covering 16 AM CVn binaries using the Liverpool Telescope on La Palma. We detected outbursts in seven systems, one of which (SDSS J0129) was seen in outburst for the first time. Our study coupled with existing data shows that ~1/3 of these helium-rich accreting compact binaries show outbursts. The orbital period of the outbursting systems lie in the range 24-44 mins and is remarkably consistent with disk-instability predictions. The characteristics of the outbursts seem to be broadly correlated with their orbital period (and hence mass transfer rate). Systems which have short periods (<30 min) tend to exhibit outbursts lasting 1--2 weeks and often show a distinct `dip' in flux shortly after the on-set of the burst. We explore the nature of these dips which are also seen in the near-UV. The longer period bursters show higher amplitude events (5 mag) that can last several months. We have made simulations to estimate how many outbursts we are likely to have missed., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2011
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397. The dark GRB080207 in an extremely red host and the implications for GRBs in highly obscured environments
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Svensson, K. M., Tanvir, N. R., Perley, D. A., Michalowski, M. J., Page, K. L., Bloom, J. S., Cenko, S. B., Hjorth, J., Jakobsson, P., Watson, D., and Wheatley, P. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] We present comprehensive X-ray, optical, near- and mid-infrared, and sub-mm observations of GRB 080207 and its host galaxy. The afterglow was undetected in the optical and near-IR, implying an optical to X-ray index <0.3, identifying GRB 080207 as a dark burst. Swift X-ray observations show extreme absorption in the host, which is confirmed by the unusually large optical extinction found by modelling the X-ray to nIR afterglow spectral energy distribution. Our Chandra observations obtained 8 days post-burst allow us to place the afterglow on the sky to sub-arcsec accuracy, enabling us to pinpoint an extremely red galaxy (ERO). Follow-up host observations with HST, Spitzer, Gemini, Keck and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) provide a photometric redshift solution of z ~1.74 (+0.05,-0.06) (1 sigma), 1.56 < z < 2.08 at 2 sigma) for the ERO host, and suggest that it is a massive and morphologically disturbed ultra-luminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) system, with L_FIR ~ 2.4 x 10^12 L_solar. These results add to the growing evidence that GRBs originating in very red hosts always show some evidence of dust extinction in their afterglows (though the converse is not true -- some extinguished afterglows are found in blue hosts). This indicates that a poorly constrained fraction of GRBs occur in very dusty environments. By comparing the inferred stellar masses, and estimates of the gas phase metallicity in both GRB hosts and sub-mm galaxies we suggest that many GRB hosts, even at z>2 are at lower metallicity than the sub-mm galaxy population, offering a likely explanation for the dearth of sub-mm detected GRB hosts. However, we also show that the dark GRB hosts are systematically more massive than those hosting optically bright events, perhaps implying that previous host samples are severely biased by the exclusion of dark events., Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2011
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398. WASP-50b: a hot Jupiter transiting a moderately active solar-type star
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Gillon, M., Doyle, A. P., Lendl, M., Maxted, P. F. L., Triaud, A. H. M. J., Anderson, D. R., Barros, S. C. C., Bento, J., Collier-Cameron, A., Enoch, B., Faedi, F., Hellier, C., Jehin, E., Magain, P., Montalban, J., Pepe, F., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Smalley, B., Segransan, D., Smith, A. M. S., Southworth, J., Udry, S., West, R. G., and Wheatley, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery by the WASP transit survey of a giant planet in a close orbit (0.0295+-0.0009 AU) around a moderately bright (V=11.6, K=10) G9 dwarf (0.89+-0.08 M_sun, 0.84+-0.03 R_sun) in the Southern constellation Eridanus. Thanks to high-precision follow-up photometry and spectroscopy obtained by the telescopes TRAPPIST and Euler, the mass and size of this planet, WASP-50b, are well constrained to 1.47+-0.09 M_jup and 1.15+-0.05 R_jup, respectively. The transit ephemeris is 2455558.6120 (+-0.0002) + N x 1.955096 (+-0.000005) HJD_UTC. The size of the planet is consistent with basic models of irradiated giant planets. The chromospheric activity (log R'_HK = -4.67) and rotational period (P_rot = 16.3+-0.5 days) of the host star suggest an age of 0.8+-0.4 Gy that is discrepant with a stellar-evolution estimate based on the measured stellar parameters (rho_star = 1.48+-0.10 rho_sun, Teff = 5400+-100 K, [Fe/H]= -0.12+-0.08) which favours an age of 7+-3.5 Gy. This discrepancy could be explained by the tidal and magnetic influence of the planet on the star, in good agreement with the observations that stars hosting hot Jupiters tend to show faster rotation and magnetic activity (Pont 2009; Hartman 2010). We measure a stellar inclination of 84 (-31,+6) deg, disfavouring a high stellar obliquity. Thanks to its large irradiation and the relatively small size of its host star, WASP-50b is a good target for occultation spectrophotometry, making it able to constrain the relationship between hot Jupiters' atmospheric thermal profiles and the chromospheric activity of their host stars proposed by Knutson et al. (2010)., Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2011
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399. Identifying a new intermediate-polar using XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL
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Middleton, Matthew J., Cackett, Edward M., Shaw, Craig, Ramsay, Gavin, Roberts, Timothy P., and Wheatley, Peter J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The bright X-ray source, 2XMMi J180438.7-145647 is fortunate to have long baseline observations in INTEGRAL that compliment observations taken by other missions. Optical spectroscopy of this object has suggested a distance of ~7 kpc and an identification with a low mass X-ray binary. We instead use the X-ray data from 0.3-40 keV to identify the source as a bright intermediate polar (IP) with an estimate for the white dwarf mass of~0.60 M_solar. This identification is supported by the presence of an iron triplet, the component lines of which are some of the strongest seen in IPs; and the signature of the spin period of the white dwarf at ~24 mins. We note that the lack of broad-band variability may suggest that this object is a stream-fed IP, similar in many respects to the well studied IP, V2400 Oph. Phase-binning has allowed us to create spectra corresponding to the peaks and troughs of the lightcurve from which we determine that the spectra appear harder in the troughs, consistent with the behaviour of other IPs binned on their spin periods. This work strongly suggests a mis-identification in the optical due to the presence of large columns of enshrouding material. We instead propose a distance to the source of <2.5 kpc to be consistent with the luminosities of other IPs in the dim, hard state. The relatively high flux of the source together with the strength of the iron lines may, in future, allow the source to be used to diagnose the properties of the shock heated plasma and the reflected component of the emission., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRAS, lead author affiliated with the University of Durham
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- 2011
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400. SuperWASP observations of pulsating Am stars
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Smalley, B, Kurtz, D. W., Smith, A. M. S., Fossati, L., Anderson, D. R., Barros, S. C. C., Butters, O. W., Cameron, A. Collier, Christian, D. J., Enoch, B., Faedi, F., Haswell, C. A., Hellier, C., Holmes, S., Horne, K., Kane, S. R., Lister, T. A., Maxted, P. F. L., Norton, A. J., Parley, N., Pollacco, D., Simpson, E. K., Skillen, I., Southworth, J., Street, R. A., West, R. G., Wheatley, P. J., and Wood, P. L.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We have studied over 1600 Am stars at a photometric precision of 1 mmag with SuperWASP photometric data. Contrary to previous belief, we find that around 200 Am stars are pulsating delta Sct and gamma Dor stars, with low amplitudes that have been missed in previous, less extensive studies. While the amplitudes are generally low, the presence of pulsation in Am stars places a strong constraint on atmospheric convection, and may require the pulsation to be laminar. While some pulsating Am stars have been previously found to be delta Sct stars, the vast majority of Am stars known to pulsate are presented in this paper. They will form the basis of future statistical studies of pulsation in the presence of atomic diffusion., Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in A&A. Owing to large size, multi-page Figure 1 is not included. Full version can be downloaded from http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~bs/wasp_Am.pdf
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- 2011
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