882 results on '"Kok R"'
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2. Risk of Four Geriatric Syndromes: A Comparison of Mental Health Care and General Hospital Inpatients
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Douairi, Jamila, Bos, E. G. T., van Munster, B. C., Boudestein, K., Benraad, C., Disselhorst, L., Oude Voshaar, R. C., Oud, F. M. M., and Kok, R. M.
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- 2023
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3. Effects of enzyme replacement therapy on cardiac function in classic infantile Pompe disease
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Scheffers, L.E., Kok, R., van den Berg, L.E., van den Hout, J.M.P., Boersma, E., van Capelle, C.I., Helbing, W.A., van der Ploeg, A.T., and Koopman, L.P.
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- 2023
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4. The Dutch Multidisciplinary Occupational Health Guideline to Enhance Work Participation Among Low Back Pain and Lumbosacral Radicular Syndrome Patients
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Luites, J. W. H., Kuijer, P. P. F. M., Hulshof, C. T. J., Kok, R., Langendam, M. W., Oosterhuis, T., Anema, J. R., Lapré-Utama, V. P., Everaert, C. P. J., Wind, H., Smeets, R. J. E. M., van Zaanen, Y., Hoebink, E. A., Voogt, L., de Hoop, W., Boerman, D. H., and Hoving, J. L.
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- 2022
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5. Study of Titan's fall southern stratospheric polar cloud composition with Cassini/CIRS: detection of benzene ice
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Vinatier, S., Schmitt, B., Bézard, B., Rannou, P., Dauphin, C., de Kok, R., Jennings, D. E., and Flasar, F. M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of a spectral signature observed at 682 cm$^{-1}$ by the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) in nadir and limb geometry observations of Titan's southern stratospheric polar region in the middle of southern fall, while stratospheric temperatures are the coldest since the beginning of the Cassini mission. The 682 cm$^{-1}$ signature, which is only observed below an altitude of 300-km, is at least partly attributed to the benzene (C$_6$H$_6$) ice $\nu_{4}$ C-H bending mode. While we first observed it in CIRS nadir spectra of the southern polar region in early 2013, we focus here on the study of nadir data acquired in May 2013, which have a more favorable observation geometry. We derived the C$_6$H$_6$ ice mass mixing ratio in 5{\deg}S latitude bins from the south pole to 65{\deg}S and infer the C$_6$H$_6$ cloud top altitude to be located deeper with increasing distance from the pole. We additionally analyzed limb data acquired in March 2015, which were the first limb dataset available after the May 2013 nadir observation, in order to infer a vertical profile of its mass mixing ratio in the 0.1 - 1 mbar region (250 - 170 km). We derive an upper limit of $\sim$1.5 $\mu$m for the equivalent radius of pure C$_6$H$_6$ ice particles from the shape of the observed emission band. Several other unidentified signatures are observed near 687 and 702 cm$^{-1}$ and possibly 695 cm$^{-1}$, which could also be due to ice spectral signatures as they are observed in the deep stratosphere at pressure levels similar to the C$_6$H$_6$ ice ones. We could not reproduce these signatures with pure nitrile ice (HCN, HC$_3$N,CH$_3$CN, C$_2$H$_5$CN and C$_2$N$_2$) spectra available in the literature except the 695 cm$^{-1}$ feature that could possibly be due to C$_2$H$_3$CN ice., Comment: accepted for publication in Icarus on 22 December 2017, in press
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- 2018
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6. Medium-resolution integral-field spectroscopy for high-contrast exoplanet imaging: Molecule maps of the $\beta$ Pictoris system with SINFONI
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Hoeijmakers, H. J., Schwarz, H., Snellen, I. A. G., de Kok, R. J., Bonnefoy, M., Chauvin, G., Lagrange, A. M., and Girard, J. H.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
ADI and SDI are well-established high-contrast imaging techniques, but their application is challenging for companions at small angular separations. The aim of this paper is to investigate to what extent adaptive-optics assisted, medium-resolution (R$\sim$5000) integral field spectrographs (IFS) can be used to directly detect the absorption of molecular species in the spectra of planets and substellar companions when these are not present in the spectrum of the star. We analyzed archival data of $\beta$ Pictoris taken with the SINFONI integral field spectrograph (VLT), originally taken to image $\beta$ Pic b using ADI techniques. At each spatial position in the field, a scaled instance of the stellar spectrum is subtracted from the data after which the residuals are cross-correlated with model spectra. The cross-correlation co-adds the individual absorption lines of the planet emission spectrum constructively, but not residual telluric and stellar features. Cross-correlation with CO and H$_2$O models results in significant detections of $\beta$ Pic b at SNRs of 14.5 and 17.0 respectively. Correlation with a 1700K BT-Settl model provides a signal with an SNR of 25.0. This contrasts with ADI, which barely reveals the planet. While the AO system only achieved modest Strehl ratios of 19-27% leading to a raw contrast of 1:240 at the planet position, cross-correlation achieves a 3$\sigma$ contrast limit of $2.5\times10^{-5}$ in this 2.5h data set $0.36"$ away from the star. AO-assisted, medium-resolution IFS such as SINFONI (VLT) and OSIRIS (Keck), can be used for high-contrast imaging utilizing cross-correlation techniques for planets that are close to their star and embedded in speckle noise. We refer to this method as molecule mapping, and advocate its application to observations with future medium resolution instruments, in particular ERIS (VLT), HARMONI (ELT) and NIRSpec and MIRI (JWST)., Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Submitted for publication in A&A
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- 2018
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7. Exoplanet atmospheres with GIANO. I. Water in the transmission spectrum of HD 189733b
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Brogi, M., Giacobbe, P., Guilluy, G., de Kok, R. J., Sozzetti, A., Mancini, L., and Bonomo, A. S.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
High-resolution spectroscopy (R $\ge$ 20,000) at near-infrared wavelengths can be used to investigate the composition, structure, and circulation patterns of exoplanet atmospheres. However, up to now it has been the exclusive dominion of the biggest telescope facilities on the ground, due to the large amount of photons necessary to measure a signal in high-dispersion spectra. Here we show that spectrographs with a novel design - in particular a large spectral range - can open exoplanet characterisation to smaller telescope facilities too. We aim to demonstrate the concept on a series of spectra of the exoplanet HD 189733 b taken at the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo with the near-infrared spectrograph GIANO during two transits of the planet. In contrast to absorption in the Earth's atmosphere (telluric absorption), the planet transmission spectrum shifts in radial velocity during transit due to the changing orbital motion of the planet. This allows us to remove the telluric spectrum while preserving the signal of the exoplanet. The latter is then extracted by cross-correlating the residual spectra with template models of the planet atmosphere computed through line-by-line radiative transfer calculations, and containing molecular absorption lines from water and methane. By combining the signal of many thousands of planet molecular lines, we confirm the presence of water vapour in the atmosphere of HD 189733 b at the 5.5-$\sigma$ level. This signal was measured only in the first of the two observing nights. By injecting and retrieving artificial signals, we show that the non-detection on the second night is likely due to an inferior quality of the data. The measured strength of the planet transmission spectrum is fully consistent with past CRIRES observations at the VLT, excluding a strong variability in the depth of molecular absorption lines., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. v2 includes language editing
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- 2018
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8. De financiële tools voor de huisarts
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Kok, R. H. G., Stünkel, F. C. G., Belo, Janneke, editor, Dijkers, Fred, editor, Leferink, Joost, editor, and in 't Veld, Kees, editor
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- 2021
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9. Discovery of water at high spectral resolution in the atmosphere of 51 Peg b
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Birkby, J. L., de Kok, R. J., Brogi, M., Schwarz, H., and Snellen, I. A. G.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of water absorption features in the dayside spectrum of the first-known hot Jupiter, 51 Peg b, confirming the star-planet system to be a double-lined spectroscopic binary. We used high-resolution (R~100,000), 3.2 micron spectra taken with CRIRES/VLT to trace the radial-velocity shift of the water features in the planet's dayside atmosphere during 4 hours of its 4.23-day orbit after superior conjunction. We detect the signature of molecular absorption by water at a significance of 5.6 sigma at a systemic velocity of Vsys=-33+/-2 km/s, coincident with the host star, with a corresponding orbital velocity Kp = 133^+4.3_-3.5 km/s. This translates directly to a planet mass of Mp=0.476^+0.032_-0.031MJ, placing it at the transition boundary between Jovian and Neptunian worlds. We determine upper and lower limits on the orbital inclination of the system of 70
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- 2017
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10. Two new records of Litsea (Lauraceae) from Singapore and the lectotypification of twenty-two names from several Lauraceae genera
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De Kok, R P J and BioStor
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- 2017
11. Depressie
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Kok, R. M., Visser, M., editor, Kok, A.A.L., editor, Spies, P.E., editor, and Buurman, B.M., editor
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- 2020
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12. Search for an exosphere in sodium and calcium in the transmission spectrum of exoplanet 55 Cancri e
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Ridden-Harper, A. R., Snellen, I. A. G., Keller, C. U., de Kok, R. J., Di Gloria, E., Hoeijmakers, H. J., Brogi, M., Fridlund, M., Vermeersen, B. L. A., and van Westrenen, W.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] The aim of this work is to search for an absorption signal from exospheric sodium (Na) and singly ionized calcium (Ca$^+$) in the optical transmission spectrum of the hot rocky super-Earth 55 Cancri e. Although the current best-fitting models to the planet mass and radius require a possible atmospheric component, uncertainties in the radius exist, making it possible that 55 Cancri e could be a hot rocky planet without an atmosphere. High resolution (R$\sim$110000) time-series spectra of five transits of 55 Cancri e, obtained with three different telescopes (UVES/VLT, HARPS/ESO 3.6m & HARPS-N/TNG) were analysed. Targeting the sodium D lines and the calcium H and K lines, the potential planet exospheric signal was filtered out from the much stronger stellar and telluric signals, making use of the change of the radial component of the orbital velocity of the planet over the transit from -57 to +57 km/sec. Combining all five transit data sets, we detect a signal potentially associated with sodium in the planet exosphere at a statistical significance level of 3$\sigma$. Combining the four HARPS transits that cover the calcium H and K lines, we also find a potential signal from ionized calcium (4.1 $\sigma$). Interestingly, this latter signal originates from just one of the transit measurements - with a 4.9$\sigma$ detection at this epoch. Unfortunately, due to the low significance of the measured sodium signal and the potentially variable Ca$^+$ signal, we estimate the p-values of these signals to be too high (corresponding to <4$\sigma$) to claim unambiguous exospheric detections. By comparing the observed signals with artificial signals injected early in the analysis, the absorption by Na and Ca$^+$ are estimated to be at a level of approximately 2.3$\times 10^{-3}$ and 7.0$\times 10^{-2}$ respectively, relative to the stellar spectrum., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, submission updated after English language editing, submission updated to correct a mistaken cross-reference noticed in A&A proof
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- 2016
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13. Rotation and winds of exoplanet HD 189733 b measured with high-dispersion transmission spectroscopy
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Brogi, M., de Kok, R. J., Albrecht, S., Snellen, I. A. G., Birkby, J. L., and Schwarz, H.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Giant exoplanets orbiting very close to their parent star (hot Jupiters) are subject to tidal forces expected to synchronize their rotational and orbital periods on short timescales (tidal locking). However, spin rotation has never been measured directly for hot Jupiters. Furthermore, their atmospheres can show equatorial super-rotation via strong eastward jet streams, and/or high-altitude winds flowing from the day- to the night-side hemisphere. Planet rotation and atmospheric circulation broaden and distort the planet spectral lines to an extent that is detectable with measurements at high spectral resolution. We observed a transit of the hot Jupiter HD 189733 b around 2.3 {\mu}m and at a spectral resolution of R~10$^5$ with CRIRES at the ESO Very Large Telescope. After correcting for the stellar absorption lines and their distortion during transit (the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect), we detect the absorption of carbon monoxide and water vapor in the planet transmission spectrum by cross-correlating with model spectra. The signal is maximized (7.6{\sigma}) for a planet rotational velocity of $(3.4^{+1.3}_{-2.1})$ km/s, corresponding to a rotational period of $(1.7^{+2.9}_{-0.4})$ days. This is consistent with the planet orbital period of 2.2 days and therefore with tidal locking. We find that the rotation of HD 189733 b is longer than 1 day (3{\sigma}). The data only marginally (1.5{\sigma}) prefer models with rotation versus models without rotation. We measure a small day- to night-side wind speed of $(-1.7^{+1.1}_{-1.2})$ km/s. Compared to the recent detection of sodium blue-shifted by (8$\pm$2) km/s, this likely implies a strong vertical wind shear between the pressures probed by near-infrared and optical transmission spectroscopy., Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2015
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14. Typifications and combinations in the Ebenaceae of Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore
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de Kok, R. P. J. and Puglisi, C.
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- 2021
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15. Notes on the monotypic genus Hexapora (Lauraceae), endemic to Peninsular Malaysia
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De Kok, R P J and BioStor
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- 2016
16. Two new records for the Lamiaceae of Singapore
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De Kok, R P J, Sengun, S, Bramley, G L C, and BioStor
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- 2016
17. A search for TiO in the optical high-resolution transmission spectrum of HD 209458b: Hindrance due to inaccuracies in the line database
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Hoeijmakers, H. J., de Kok, R. J., Snellen, I. A. G., Brogi, M., Birkby, J. L., and Schwarz, H.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The spectral signature of an exoplanet can be separated from the spectrum of its host star using high-resolution spectroscopy. During such observations, the radial component of the planet's orbital velocity changes, resulting in a significant Doppler shift which allows its spectral features to be extracted. Aims: In this work, we aim to detect TiO in the optical transmission spectrum of HD 209458b. Gaseous TiO has been suggested as the cause of the thermal inversion layer invoked to explain the dayside spectrum of this planet. Method: We used archival data from the 8.2m Subaru Telescope taken with the High Dispersion Spectrograph of a transit of HD209458b in 2002. We created model transmission spectra which include absorption by TiO, and cross-correlated them with the residual spectral data after removal of the dominating stellar absorption features. We subsequently co-added the correlation signal in time, taking into account the change in Doppler shift due to the orbit of the planet. Results: We detect no significant cross-correlation signal due to TiO, though artificial injection of our template spectra into the data indicates a sensitivity down to a volume mixing ratio of ~10E-10. However, cross-correlating the template spectra with a HARPS spectrum of Barnard's star yields only a weak wavelength-dependent correlation, even though Barnard's star is an M4V dwarf which exhibits clear TiO absorption. We infer that the TiO line list poorly match the real positions of TiO lines at spectral resolutions of ~100,000. Similar line lists are also used in the PHOENIX and Kurucz stellar atmosphere suites and we show that their synthetic M-dwarf spectra also correlate poorly with the HARPS spectra of Barnard's star and five other M-dwarfs. We conclude that the lack of an accurate TiO line list is currently critically hampering this high-resolution retrieval technique., Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2014
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18. Strafrechtelijke jurisprudentie van het EHRM, de HR en het GHvJ.
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Bonnevalle-Kok, R.
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- 2024
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19. A revision of Cryptocarya (Lauraceae) from Thailand and Indochina
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De Kok, R P J and BioStor
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- 2015
20. Cryptocarya Nitens (Lauraceae), a New Species Record for Singapore
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De Kok, R P J and BioStor
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- 2015
21. Titan's atmosphere as observed by Cassini/VIMS solar occultations: CH$_4$, CO and evidence for C$_2$H$_6$ absorption
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Maltagliati, L., Bézard, B., Vinatier, S., Hedman, M. M., Lellouch, E., Nicholson, P. D., Sotin, C., de Kok, R. J., and Sicardy, B.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the VIMS solar occultations dataset, which allows us to extract vertically resolved information on the characteristics of Titan's atmosphere between 100-700 km with a characteristic vertical resolution of 10 km. After a series of data treatment procedures, 4 occultations out of 10 are retained. This sample covers different seasons and latitudes of Titan. The transmittances show clearly the evolution of the haze and detect the detached layer at 310 km in Sept. 2011 at mid-northern latitudes. Through the inversion of the transmission spectra with a line-by-line radiative transfer code we retrieve the vertical distribution of CH$_4$ and CO mixing ratio. The two methane bands at 1.4 and 1.7 {\mu}m are always in good agreement and yield an average stratospheric abundance of $1.28\pm0.08$%. This is significantly less than the value of 1.48% obtained by the GCMS/Huygens instrument. The analysis of the residual spectra after the inversion shows that there are additional absorptions which affect a great part of the VIMS wavelength range. We attribute many of these additional bands to gaseous ethane, whose near-infrared spectrum is not well modeled yet. Ethane contributes significantly to the strong absorption between 3.2-3.5 {\mu}m that was previously attributed only to C-H stretching bands from aerosols. Ethane bands may affect the surface windows too, especially at 2.7 {\mu}m. Other residual bands are generated by stretching modes of C-H, C-C and C-N bonds. In addition to the C-H stretch from aliphatic hydrocarbons at 3.4 {\mu}m, we detect a strong and narrow absorption at 3.28 {\mu}m which we tentatively attribute to the presence of PAHs in the stratosphere. C-C and C-N stretching bands are possibly present between 4.3-4.5 {\mu}m. Finally, we obtain the CO mixing ratio between 70-170 km. The average result of $46\pm16$ ppm is in good agreement with previous studies., Comment: 51 pages, 28 figures
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- 2014
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22. Carbon monoxide and water vapor in the atmosphere of the non-transiting exoplanet HD 179949 b
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Brogi, M., de Kok, R. J., Birkby, J. L., Schwarz, H., and Snellen, I. A. G.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) In recent years, ground-based high-resolution spectroscopy has become a powerful tool for investigating exoplanet atmospheres. It allows the robust identification of molecular species, and it can be applied to both transiting and non-transiting planets. Radial-velocity measurements of the star HD 179949 indicate the presence of a giant planet companion in a close-in orbit. Here we present the analysis of spectra of the system at 2.3 micron, obtained at a resolution of R~100,000, during three nights of observations with CRIRES at the VLT. We targeted the system while the exoplanet was near superior conjunction, aiming to detect the planet's thermal spectrum and the radial component of its orbital velocity. We detect molecular absorption from carbon monoxide and water vapor with a combined S/N of 6.3, at a projected planet orbital velocity of K_P = (142.8 +- 3.4) km/s, which translates into a planet mass of M_P = (0.98 +- 0.04) Jupiter masses, and an orbital inclination of i = (67.7 +- 4.3) degrees, using the known stellar radial velocity and stellar mass. The detection of absorption features rather than emission means that, despite being highly irradiated, HD 179949 b does not have an atmospheric temperature inversion in the probed range of pressures and temperatures. Since the host star is active (R_HK > -4.9), this is in line with the hypothesis that stellar activity damps the onset of thermal inversion layers owing to UV flux photo-dissociating high-altitude, optical absorbers. Finally, our analysis favors an oxygen-rich atmosphere for HD 179949 b, although a carbon-rich planet cannot be statistically ruled out based on these data alone., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2014
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23. Detection of water absorption in the day side atmosphere of HD 189733 b using ground-based high-resolution spectroscopy at 3.2 microns
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Birkby, J. L., de Kok, R. J., Brogi, M., de Mooij, E. J. W., Schwarz, H., Albrecht, S., and Snellen, I. A. G.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report a 4.8 sigma detection of water absorption features in the day side spectrum of the hot Jupiter HD 189733 b. We used high-resolution (R~100,000) spectra taken at 3.2 microns with CRIRES on the VLT to trace the radial-velocity shift of the water features in the planet's day side atmosphere during 5 h of its 2.2 d orbit as it approached secondary eclipse. Despite considerable telluric contamination in this wavelength regime, we detect the signal within our uncertainties at the expected combination of systemic velocity (Vsys=-3 +5-6 km/s) and planet orbital velocity (Kp=154 +14-10 km/s), and determine a H2O line contrast ratio of (1.3+/-0.2)x10^-3 with respect to the stellar continuum. We find no evidence of significant absorption or emission from other carbon-bearing molecules, such as methane, although we do note a marginal increase in the significance of our detection to 5.1 sigma with the inclusion of carbon dioxide in our template spectrum. This result demonstrates that ground-based, high-resolution spectroscopy is suited to finding not just simple molecules like CO, but also to more complex molecules like H2O even in highly telluric contaminated regions of the Earth's transmission spectrum. It is a powerful tool that can be used for conducting an immediate census of the carbon- and oxygen-bearing molecules in the atmospheres of giant planets, and will potentially allow the formation and migration history of these planets to be constrained by the measurement of their atmospheric C/O ratios., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters
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- 2013
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24. Detection of molecular absorption in the dayside of exoplanet 51 Pegasi b?
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Brogi, M., Snellen, I. A. G., de Kok, R. J., Albrecht, S., Birkby, J. L., and de Mooij, E. J. W.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we present ground-based high-resolution spectroscopy of 51 Pegasi using CRIRES at the Very Large Telescope. The system was observed for 3x5 hours at 2.3 {\mu}m at a spectral resolution of R = 100,000, targeting potential signatures from carbon monoxide, water vapour and methane in the planet's dayside spectrum. In the first 2x5 hours of data, we find a combined signal from carbon monoxide and water in absorption at a formal 5.9{\sigma} confidence level, indicating a non-inverted atmosphere. We derive a planet mass of M_P = (0.46 +- 0.02) M_Jup and an orbital inclination i between 79.6 and 82.2 degrees, with the upper limit set by the non-detection of the planet transit in previous photometric monitoring. However, there is no trace of the signal in the final 5 hours of data. A statistical analysis indicates that the signal from the first two nights is robust, but we find no compelling explanation for its absence in the final night. The latter suffers from stronger noise residuals and greater instrumental instability than the first two nights, but these cannot fully account for the missing signal. It is possible that the integrated dayside emission from 51 Peg b is instead strongly affected by weather. However, more data are required before we can claim any time variability in the planet's atmosphere., Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2013
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25. The GROUSE project III: Ks-band observations of the thermal emission from WASP-33b
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de Mooij, E. J. W., Brogi, M., de Kok, R. J., Snellen, I. A. G., Kenworthy, M. A., and Karjalainen, R.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
In recent years, day-side emission from about a dozen hot Jupiters has been detected through ground-based secondary eclipse observations in the near-infrared. These near-infrared observations are vital for determining the energy budgets of hot Jupiters, since they probe the planet's spectral energy distribution near its peak. The aim of this work is to measure the Ks-band secondary eclipse depth of WASP-33b, the first planet discovered to transit an A-type star. This planet receives the highest level of irradiation of all transiting planets discovered to date. Furthermore, its host-star shows pulsations and is classified as a low-amplitude delta-Scuti. As part of our GROUnd-based Secondary Eclipse (GROUSE) project we have obtained observations of two separate secondary eclipses of WASP-33b in the Ks-band using the LIRIS instrument on the William Herschel Telescope (WHT). The telescope was significantly defocused to avoid saturation of the detector for this bright star (K~7.5). To increase the stability and the cadence of the observations, they were performed in staring mode. We collected a total of 5100 and 6900 frames for the first and the second night respectively, both with an average cadence of 3.3 seconds. On the second night the eclipse is detected at the 12-sigma level, with a measured eclipse depth of 0.244+0.027-0.020 %. This eclipse depth corresponds to a brightness temperature of 3270+115-160 K. The measured brightness temperature on the second night is consistent with the expected equilibrium temperature for a planet with a very low albedo and a rapid re-radiation of the absorbed stellar light. For the other night the short out-of-eclipse baseline prevents good corrections for the stellar pulsations and systematic effects, which makes this dataset unreliable for eclipse depth measurements. This demonstrates the need of getting a sufficient out-of-eclipse baseline., Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2013
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26. Evidence for the disintegration of KIC 12557548 b
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Brogi, M., Keller, C. U., Ovelar, M. de Juan, Kenworthy, M. A., de Kok, R. J., Min, M., and Snellen, I. A. G.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. The Kepler object KIC 12557548 b is peculiar. It exhibits transit-like features every 15.7 hours that vary in depth between 0.2% and 1.2%. Rappaport et al. (2012) explain the observations in terms of a disintegrating, rocky planet that has a trailing cloud of dust created and constantly replenished by thermal surface erosion. The variability of the transit depth is then a consequence of changes in the cloud optical depth. Aims. We aim to validate the disintegrating-planet scenario by modeling the detailed shape of the observed light curve, and thereby constrain the cloud particle properties to better understand the nature of this intriguing object. Methods. We analysed the six publicly-available quarters of raw Kepler data, phase-folded the light curve and fitted it to a model for the trailing dust cloud. Constraints on the particle properties were investigated with a light-scattering code. Results. The light curve exhibits clear signatures of light scattering and absorption by dust, including a brightening in flux just before ingress correlated with the transit depth and explained by forward scattering, and an asymmetry in the transit light curve shape, which is easily reproduced by an exponentially decaying distribution of optically thin dust, with a typical grain size of 0.1 micron. Conclusions. Our quantitative analysis supports the hypothesis that the transit signal of KIC 12557548 b is due to a variable cloud of dust, most likely originating from a disintegrating object., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2012
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27. The influence of forward-scattered light in transmission measurements of (exo)planetary atmospheres
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de Kok, R. J. and Stam, D. M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] The transmission of light through a planetary atmosphere can be studied as a function of altitude and wavelength using stellar or solar occultations, giving often unique constraints on the atmospheric composition. For exoplanets, a transit yields a limb-integrated, wavelength-dependent transmission spectrum of an atmosphere. When scattering haze and/or cloud particles are present in the planetary atmosphere, the amount of transmitted flux not only depends on the total optical thickness of the slant light path that is probed, but also on the amount of forward-scattering by the scattering particles. Here, we present results of calculations with a three-dimensional Monte Carlo code that simulates the transmitted flux during occultations or transits. For isotropically scattering particles, like gas molecules, the transmitted flux appears to be well-described by the total atmospheric optical thickness. Strongly forward-scattering particles, however, such as commonly found in atmospheres of Solar System planets, can increase the transmitted flux significantly. For exoplanets, such added flux can decrease the apparent radius of the planet by several scale heights, which is comparable to predicted and measured features in exoplanet transit spectra. We performed detailed calculations for Titan's atmosphere between 2.0 and 2.8 micron and show that haze and gas abundances will be underestimated by about 8% if forward-scattering is ignored in the retrievals. At shorter wavelengths, errors in the gas and haze abundances and in the spectral slope of the haze particles can be several tens of percent, also for other Solar System planetary atmospheres. We also find that the contribution of forward-scattering can be fairly well described by modelling the atmosphere as a plane-parallel slab., Comment: Icarus, accepted for publication
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- 2012
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28. The signature of orbital motion from the dayside of the planet tau Bootis b
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Brogi, M., Snellen, I. A. G., de Kok, R. J., Albrecht, S., Birkby, J., and de Mooij, E. J. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The giant planet orbiting tau Bootis was among the first extrasolar planets to be discovered through the reflex motion of its host star. It is one of the brightest known and most nearby planets with an orbital period of just a few days. Over the course of more than a decade, measurements of its orbital inclination have been announced and refuted, and have subsequently remained elusive until now. Here we report on the detection of carbon monoxide absorption in the thermal day-side spectrum of tau Bootis b. At a spectral resolution of R~100,000, we trace the change in the radial velocity of the planet over a large range in phase, determining an orbital inclination of i=44.5+-1.5 degrees and a true planet mass of 5.95+-0.28 MJup. This result extends atmospheric characterisation to non-transiting planets. The strong absorption signal points to an atmosphere with a temperature that is decreasing towards higher altitudes. This is a stark contrast to the temperature inversion invoked for other highly irradiated planets, and supports models in which the absorbing compounds believed to cause such atmospheric inversions are destroyed by the ultraviolet emission from the active host star., Comment: To appear in the June 28 issue of Nature: main article + supplementary information
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- 2012
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29. EChO - Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory
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Tinetti, G., Beaulieu, J. P., Henning, T., Meyer, M., Micela, G., Ribas, I., Stam, D., Swain, M., Krause, O., Ollivier, M., Pace, E., Swinyard, B., Aylward, A., van Boekel, R., Coradini, A., Encrenaz, T., Snellen, I., Zapatero-Osorio, M. R., Bouwman, J., Cho, J. Y-K., Foresto, V. Coudé du, Guillot, T., Lopez-Morales, M., Mueller-Wodarg, I., Palle, E., Selsis, F., Sozzetti, A., Ade, P. A. R., Achilleos, N., Adriani, A., Agnor, C. B., Afonso, C., Prieto, C. Allende, Bakos, G., Barber, R. J., Barlow, M., Bernath, P., Bezard, B., Bordé, P., Brown, L. R., Cassan, A., Cavarroc, C., Ciaravella, A., Cockell, C. O. U., Coustenis, A., Danielski, C., Decin, L., De Kok, R., Demangeon, O., Deroo, P., Doel, P., Drossart, P., Fletcher, L. N., Focardi, M., Forget, F., Fossey, S., Fouqué, P., Frith, J., Galand, M., Gaulme, P., Hernández, J. I. González, Grasset, O., Grassi, D., Grenfell, J. L., Griffin, M. J., Griffith, C. A., Grözinger, U., Guedel, M., Guio, P., Hainaut, O., Hargreaves, R., Hauschildt, P. H., Heng, K., Heyrovsky, D., Hueso, R., Irwin, P., Kaltenegger, L., Kervella, P., Kipping, D., Koskinen, T. T., Kovács, G., La Barbera, A., Lammer, H., Lellouch, E., Leto, G., Morales, M. Lopez, Valverde, M. A. Lopez, Lopez-Puertas, M., Lovis, C., Maggio, A., Maillard, J. P., Prado, J. Maldonado, Marquette, J. B., Martin-Torres, F. J., Maxted, P., Miller, S., Molinari, S., Montes, D., Moro-Martin, A., Moses, J. I., Mousis, O., Tuong, N. Nguyen, Nelson, R., Orton, G. S., Pantin, E., Pascale, E., Pezzuto, S., Pinfield, D., Poretti, E., Prinja, R., Prisinzano, L., Rees, J. M., Reiners, A., Samuel, B., Sanchez-Lavega, A., Forcada, J. Sanz, Sasselov, D., Savini, G., Sicardy, B., Smith, A., Stixrude, L., Strazzulla, G., Tennyson, J., Tessenyi, M., Vasisht, G., Vinatier, S., Viti, S., Waldmann, I., White, G. J., Widemann, T., Wordsworth, R., Yelle, R., Yung, Y., and Yurchenko, S. N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A dedicated mission to investigate exoplanetary atmospheres represents a major milestone in our quest to understand our place in the universe by placing our Solar System in context and by addressing the suitability of planets for the presence of life. EChO -the Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory- is a mission concept specifically geared for this purpose. EChO will provide simultaneous, multi-wavelength spectroscopic observations on a stable platform that will allow very long exposures. EChO will build on observations by Hubble, Spitzer and groundbased telescopes, which discovered the first molecules and atoms in exoplanetary atmospheres. EChO will simultaneously observe a broad enough spectral region -from the visible to the mid-IR- to constrain from one single spectrum the temperature structure of the atmosphere and the abundances of the major molecular species. The spectral range and resolution are tailored to separate bands belonging to up to 30 molecules to retrieve the composition and temperature structure of planetary atmospheres. The target list for EChO includes planets ranging from Jupiter-sized with equilibrium temperatures Teq up to 2000 K, to those of a few Earth masses, with Teq ~300 K. We have baselined a dispersive spectrograph design covering continuously the 0.4-16 micron spectral range in 6 channels (1 in the VIS, 5 in the IR), which allows the spectral resolution to be adapted from several tens to several hundreds, depending on the target brightness. The instrument will be mounted behind a 1.5 m class telescope, passively cooled to 50 K, with the instrument structure and optics passively cooled to ~45 K. EChO will be placed in a grand halo orbit around L2. We have also undertaken a first-order cost and development plan analysis and find that EChO is easily compatible with the ESA M-class mission framework., Comment: Accepted for publication in Experimental Astronomy, 23 pages, 15 figures
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- 2011
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30. Optical to near-infrared transit observations of super-Earth GJ1214b: water-world or mini-Neptune?
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de Mooij, E. J. W., Brogi, M., de Kok, R. J., Koppenhoefer, J., Nefs, S. V., Snellen, I. A. G., Greiner, J., Hanse, J., Heinsbroek, R. C., Lee, C. H., and van der Werf, P. P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
GJ1214b is thought to be either a mini-Neptune with a thick, hydrogen-rich atmosphere, or a planet with a composition dominated by water. In the case of a hydrogen-rich atmosphere, molecular absorption and scattering processes may result in detectable radius variations as a function of wavelength. The aim of this paper is to measure these variations. We have obtained observations of the transit of GJ1214b in the r- and I-band with the INT, in the g, r, i and z bands with the 2.2 meter MPI/ESO telescope, in the Ks-band with the NOT, and in the Kc-band with the WHT. By comparing the transit depth between the the different bands, which is a measure for the planet-to-star size ratio, the atmosphere is investigated. We do not detect clearly significant variations in the planet-to-star size ratio as function of wavelength. Although the ratio at the shortest measured wavelength, in g-band, is 2sigma larger than in the other bands. The uncertainties in the Ks and Kc bands are large, due to systematic features in the light curves. The tentative increase in the planet-to-star size ratio at the shortest wavelength could be a sign of an increase in the effective planet-size due to Rayleigh scattering, which would require GJ1214b to have a hydrogen-rich atmosphere. If true, then the atmosphere has to have both clouds, to suppress planet-size variations at red optical wavelengths, as well as a sub-solar metallicity, to suppress strong molecular features in the near- and mid-infrared. However, star spots, which are known to be present on the hoststar's surface, can (partly) cancel out the expected variations in planet-to-star size ratio, due to the lower surface temperature of the spots . A hypothetical spot-fraction of 10% would be able to raise the infrared points sufficiently with respect to the optical measurements to be inconsistent with a water-dominated atmosphere. [abridged], Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2011
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31. Characterizing exoplanetary atmospheres through infrared polarimetry
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de Kok, R. J., Stam, D. M., and Karalidi, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Planets can emit polarized thermal radiation, just like brown dwarfs. We present calculated thermal polarization signals from hot exoplanets, using an advanced radiative transfer code that fully includes all orders of scattering by gaseous molecules and cloud particles. The code spatially resolves the disk of the planet, allowing simulations for horizontally inhomogeneous planets. Our results show that the degree of linear polarization, P, of an exoplanet's thermal radiation is expected to be highest near the planet's limb and that this P depends on the temperature and its gradient, the scattering properties and the distribution of the cloud particles. Integrated over the disk of a spherically symmetric planet, P of the thermal radiation equals zero. However, for planets that appear spherically asymmetric, e.g. due to flattening, cloud bands or spots in their atmosphere, differences in their day and night sides, and/or obscuring rings, P is often larger than 0.1 %, in favorable cases even reaching several percent at near-infrared wavelengths. Detection of thermal polarization signals can give access to planetary parameters that are otherwise hard to obtain: it immediately confirms the presence of clouds, and P can then constrain atmospheric inhomogeneities and the flattening due to the planet's rotation rate. For zonally symmetric planets, the angle of polarization will yield the components of the planet's spin axis normal to the line-of-sight. Finally, our simulations show that P is generally more sensitive to variability in a cloudy planet's atmosphere than the thermal flux is, and could hence better reveal certain dynamical processes., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2011
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32. The influence of non-isotropic scattering of thermal radiation on spectra of brown dwarfs and hot exoplanets
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de Kok, R. J., Helling, Ch., Stam, D. M., Woitke, P., and Witte, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
(abridged) We calculate near-infrared thermal emission spectra using a doubling-adding radiative transfer code, which includes scattering by clouds and haze. Initial temperature profiles and cloud optical depths are taken from the drift-phoenix brown dwarf model. As is well known, cloud particles change the spectrum compared to when clouds are ignored. The clouds reduce fluxes in the near-infrared spectrum and make it redder than for the clear sky case. We also confirm that not including scattering in the spectral calculations can result in errors on the spectra of many tens of percent, both in magnitude and in variations with wavelength. This is especially apparent for particles that are larger than the wavelength and only have little iron in them. Scattering particles will show deeper absorption features than absorbing (e.g. iron) particles and particle size will also affect the calculated infrared colours. Large particles also tend to be strongly forward-scattering, and we show that assuming isotropic scattering in this case also leads to very large errors in the spectrum. Thus, care must be taken in the choice of radiative transfer method for heat balance or spectral calculations when clouds are present in the atmosphere. Besides the choice of radiative transfer method, the type of particles that are predicted by models will change conclusions about e.g. infrared colours and trace gas abundances. As a result, knowledge of the scattering properties of the clouds is essential when deriving temperature profiles or gas abundances from direct infrared observations of exoplanets or brown dwarfs and from secondary eclipse measurements of transiting exoplanets, since scattering clouds will change the depth of gas absorption features, among other things. Thus, ignoring the presence of clouds can yield retrieved properties that differ significantly from the real atmospheric properties., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. The abstract and a part of the introduction have been re-worded compared to the accepted version to avoid misinterpretation of the paper as much as possible
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
33. The GROUSE project II: Detection of the Ks-band secondary eclipse of exoplanet HAT-P-1b
- Author
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de Mooij, E. J. W., de Kok, R. J., Nefs, S. V., and Snellen, I. A. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Context: Only recently it has become possible to measure the thermal emission from hot-Jupiters at near-Infrared wavelengths using ground-based telescopes, by secondary eclipse observations. This allows the planet flux to be probed around the peak of its spectral energy distribution, which is vital for the understanding of its energy budget. Aims: The aim of the reported work is to measure the eclipse depth of the planet HAT-P-1b at 2.2micron. This planet is an interesting case, since the amount of stellar irradiation it receives falls in between that of the two best studied systems (HD209458 and HD189733), and it has been suggested to have a weak thermal inversion layer. Methods: We have used the LIRIS instrument on the William Herschel Telescope (WHT) to observe the secondary eclipse of HATP-1b in the Ks-band, as part of our Ground-based secondary eclipse (GROUSE) project. The observations were done in staring mode, while significantly defocusing the telescope to avoid saturation on the K=8.4 star. With an average cadence of 2.5 seconds, we collected 6520 frames during one night. Results: The eclipse is detected at the 4sigma level, the measured depth being 0.109+/-0.025%. The uncertainties are dominated by residual systematic effects, as estimated from different reduction/analysis procedures. The measured depth corresponds to a brightness temperature of 2136+150-170K. This brightness temperature is significantly higher than those derived from longer wavelengths, making it difficult to fit all available data points with a plausible atmospheric model. However, it may be that we underestimate the true uncertainties of our measurements, since it is notoriously difficult to assign precise statistical significance to a result when systematic effects are important., Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2011
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34. e-Flora Malesiana: state of the art and perspectives
- Author
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Roos, M C, Berendsohn, W G, Dessein, S, Hamann, T, Hoffmann, N, Hovenkamp, P, Janssen, T, Kirkup, D, De Kok, R, Sierra, S E C, Smets, E, Webb, C, Van Welzen, P C, and BioStor
- Published
- 2011
35. Screening of Autism Spectrum Disorders in Geriatric Psychiatry
- Author
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Heijnen-Kohl, S. M. J., Kok, R. M., Wilting, R. M. H. J., Rossi, G., and van Alphen, S. S. J.
- Abstract
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are difficult to detect in old age. This study examined if ASD symptoms in older adults (age > 60) can be detected with the Dutch informant personality questionnaire, (Hetero-Anamnestische Persoonlijkheidsvragenlijst, HAP) in a mental health setting. Patients with ASD (N = 40) were compared to patients with a different psychiatric diagnosis (N = 43; personality disorders excluded). The ASD group had significant higher scores on the scales "Socially avoidant behavior", "Rigid behavior" and "Unpredictable and impulsive behavior". These scales were able to discriminate between individuals with or without ASD. The HAP can thus be used as a screening instrument for ASD symptoms in elderly patients. Further research is needed to clarify what items have the best predictive validity for ASD symptoms.
- Published
- 2017
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36. Experimental Reproduction of Malabsorption Syndrome with Different Combinations of Reovirus, Escherichia coli, and Treated Homogenates Obtained from Broilers
- Author
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Zekarias, B., van Roozelaar, D. J., Kok, R. S., Pol, J. M. A., and Pijpers, A.
- Published
- 2002
37. How to assess severe burnout?: Cutoff points for the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT) based on three European samples
- Author
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Schaufeli, W.B., De Witte, H., Hakanen, J.J., Kaltiainen, J., Kok, R., Leerstoel Taris, Work and Organizational Psychology: Occupational Health Psychology, Leerstoel Taris, and Work and Organizational Psychology: Occupational Health Psychology
- Subjects
clinical burnout ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Burnout, Psychological ,cross-national ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,burnout diagnosis ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Professional ,Burnout ,Psychological ,Humans ,ROC analysis ,Burnout, Professional ,Finland ,Netherlands - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Despite decades of burnout research, clinical validated cut-off scores that discriminate between those who suffer from burnout and those who don’t are still lacking. To establish such cut-off scores, the current study uses a newly developed questionnaire, the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT) that consists of four subscales (exhaustion, mental distancing, and emotional and cognitive impairment). Separate cut-offs were computed for those at risk for burnout and those suffering from severe burnout for the original BAT-23 as well as for the shortened BAT-12. METHODS: Relative operating characteristic (ROC) analyses were carried out using representative samples of healthy employees from The Netherlands (N=1370), Belgium (Flanders; N=1403) and Finland (N=1350). In addition, samples of employees who received a burnout diagnosis were used (N=335, 158 and 50, respectively). RESULTS: The diagnostic accuracy of the BAT (area under the curve) ranges from good to excellent with the exception of mental distancing, which is fair. The country-specific cut-off values as well as their specificity and sensitivity are comparable to those of the pooled sample. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to country-specific cut-offs, general cut-offs can be used tentatively in other similar countries, pending future replication studies. Caution is warranted for using cut-offs for mental distance as the sensitivity and specificity of this subscale is relatively poor. It is concluded that the BAT can be used in organizational surveys for identifying employees at risk for burnout and, in clinical treatment settings, for identifying those with severe burnout, keeping in mind the tentativeness of the present cut-offs.
- Published
- 2023
38. Preliminary project design for insect production: part 5 – models and simulation of insect production – organism development
- Author
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Kok, R., primary
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
39. Physical properties of rice husk and bran briquettes under low pressure densification for rural applications
- Author
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Yank, A., Ngadi, M., and Kok, R.
- Published
- 2016
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40. A revision of Cryptocarya R. Br. (Lauraceae) of Peninsular Malaysia
- Author
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de Kok, R. P. J.
- Published
- 2016
41. Additional file 1 of Complexity and interplay of faced adversities and perceived health and well-being in highly vulnerable pregnant women—the Mothers of Rotterdam program
- Author
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Bertens, L. C. M., Mohabier, K. S. C., van der Hulst, M., Broekharst, D. S. E., Ismaili M’hamdi, H., Burdorf, A., Kok, R., de Graaf, J. P., and Steegers, E. A. P.
- Abstract
Additional file 1: Supplementary Table 1. Comparison between participants and non-participants.
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- 2023
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42. Strafrechtelijke jurisprudentie van het EHRM, de HR en het GHvJ.
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Bonnevalle-Kok, R.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Screening of Autism Spectrum Disorders in Geriatric Psychiatry
- Author
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Heijnen-Kohl, S. M. J., Kok, R. M., Wilting, R. M. H. J., Rossi, G., and van Alphen, S. P. J.
- Subjects
Elderly patients -- Psychological aspects ,Pervasive developmental disorders -- Diagnosis ,Health status indicators -- Evaluation ,Health - Abstract
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are difficult to detect in old age. This study examined if ASD symptoms in older adults (age > 60) can be detected with the Dutch informant personality questionnaire, (Hetero-Anamnestische Persoonlijkheidsvragenlijst, HAP) in a mental health setting. Patients with ASD (N = 40) were compared to patients with a different psychiatric diagnosis (N = 43; personality disorders excluded). The ASD group had significant higher scores on the scales 'Socially avoidant behavior', 'Rigid behavior' and 'Unpredictable and impulsive behavior'. These scales were able to discriminate between individuals with or without ASD. The HAP can thus be used as a screening instrument for ASD symptoms in elderly patients. Further research is needed to clarify what items have the best predictive validity for ASD symptoms., Author(s): S. M. J. Heijnen-Kohl [sup.1] , R. M. Kok [sup.2] , R. M. H. J. Wilting [sup.3] , G. Rossi [sup.4] , S. P. J. van Alphen [sup.1] [sup.4] [...]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Strafrechtelijke jurisprudentie van het EHRM, de HR en het GHvJ
- Author
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Bonnevalle-Kok, R., primary
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. In Memoriam Mient Jan Faber (1940-2022) Van Wiskundige tot vredesactivist
- Author
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Hart, K.P., Koetsier, T., Kok, R., van Mill, J., and Algebra, Geometry & Mathematical Physics (KDV, FNWI)
- Abstract
Op 15 mei 2022 overleed Mient Jan Faber, bij velen bekend als het gezicht van het Interkerkelijk Vredesberaad (IKV). Dit artikel gaat over hem en over zijn wiskunde.
- Published
- 2022
46. Rapid hepatic clearance of full length CCN-2/CTGF: a putative role for LRP1-mediated endocytosis
- Author
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Gerritsen, K. G. F., Bovenschen, N., Nguyen, T. Q., Sprengers, D., Koeners, M. P., van Koppen, A. N., Joles, J. A., Goldschmeding, R., and Kok, R. J.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Science goals and mission concept for the future exploration of Titan and Enceladus
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Tobie, G., Teanby, N.A., Coustenis, A., Jaumann, R., Raulin, F., Schmidt, J., Carrasco, N., Coates, A.J., Cordier, D., De Kok, R., Geppert, W.D., Lebreton, J.-P., Lefevre, A., Livengood, T.A., Mandt, K.E., Mitri, G., Nimmo, F., Nixon, C.A., Norman, L., Pappalardo, R.T., Postberg, F., Rodriguez, S., Schulze-Makuch, D., Soderblom, J.M., Solomonidou, A., Stephan, K., Stofan, E.R., Turtle, E.P., Wagner, R.J., West, R.A., and Westlake, J.H.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Principles of full autonomy in image interpretation. The basic architectural design for a sequential process with image objects
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Kok, R. de, Wezyk, P., Cartwright, William, editor, Gartner, Georg, editor, Meng, Liqiu, editor, Peterson, Michael P., editor, Blaschke, Thomas, editor, Lang, Stefan, editor, and Hay, Geoffrey J., editor
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Labiatae
- Author
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Harley, R. M., Atkins, S., Budantsev, A. L., Cantino, P. D., Conn, B. J., Grayer, R., Harley, M. M., de Kok, R., Krestovskaja, T., Morales, R., Paton, A. J., Ryding, O., Upson, T., Kubitzki, Klaus, editor, and Kadereit, Joachim W., editor
- Published
- 2004
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50. Water vapor in Titan’s stratosphere from Cassini CIRS far-infrared spectra
- Author
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Cottini, V., Nixon, C.A., Jennings, D.E., Anderson, C.M., Gorius, N., Bjoraker, G.L., Coustenis, A., Teanby, N.A., Achterberg, R.K., Bézard, B., de Kok, R., Lellouch, E., Irwin, P.G.J., Flasar, F.M., and Bampasidis, G.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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