scholarly journals On-Sky Speckle Nulling Demonstration at Small Angular Separation with SCExAO

2014 ◽  
Vol 126 (940) ◽  
pp. 565-572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frantz Martinache ◽  
Olivier Guyon ◽  
Nemanja Jovanovic ◽  
Christophe Clergeon ◽  
Garima Singh ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 571-571
Author(s):  
M. Haywood ◽  
J. Palasi ◽  
A. Gómez ◽  
L. Meillon Dasgal

The Hipparcos catalogue provides an accurate and extensive sampling of the solar neighbourhood HR diagram. The morphology of this diagram depends on selection criteria of the catalogue such as the limiting magnitude, angular separation and on the characteristics of the stellar populations near the sun (space density, metallicity, star formation rate, etc). Since the Hipparcos data are so accurate, one needs to model precisely the different selection bias and, at the same time, parametrize models of the galactic stellar populations with sufficient flexibility that as much information as possible can be grasped from the catalogue. Comparisons between our model and the Hipparcos catalogue will be presented elsewhere. Since the quantity of information contained in the Hipparcoscatalogue is so important, models ought to be complex, and external contraints, obtained prior to any general comparison with the model, are welcome. A major factor that influences the distribution of the stars in the HR diagram is the metallicity. For the late type stars, the metallicity distribution can be best studied by re-analysing a volume-limited sample of stars from the catalogue.


2021 ◽  
Vol 03 (03) ◽  
pp. 2150009
Author(s):  
Gillian Foo ◽  
Jhoon Yong Tan ◽  
Edmund Yuen ◽  
Laurentcia Arlany ◽  
A. Yang ◽  
...  

As encouraged by the interesting paper “Solar eclipses as a teaching opportunity in relativity” by Overduin et al.,awe made measurements of the angular deflections of neighboring stars during the 9 March 2016 total solar eclipse as imaged by National University of Singapore (NUS) students, to verify a result of general relativity. In this project, we used these images and measured the stars’ pixel positions and transformed them to equatorial coordinates using a similar approach to Overduin et al., with a few modifications. Instead of solving to determine the pixel scale and rotation, we performed a plate solution using the software AstroImageJ which enables accounting for the image’s higher order distortion. This data is found in the image’s Flexible Image Transport System (FITS) header. Image star pair separations were then compared to their database separations after determining how the individual deflections affect angular separation. Our experimental results have large uncertainties and were deemed imprecise to confirm the effects of gravitational light deflection. We include a detailed analysis and discussion on this educational project.


1976 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 475-475
Author(s):  
M. Rodonò

About 50% of the flare events observed on red dwarfs are at least double-peaked. As the majority of flare stars are members of double or multiple systems, the possibility that time-overlapping flares originate quasi-simultaneously on the individual components is discussed.Assuming a poissonian occurrence of flares in both components, the expected probability of observing double-peaked flares is lower than 1% for the most active binary systems.However, from photometric observations of the double flare star EQ Peg (BD +19°5116 AB) carried out by the author with an area scanner (the components' angular separation is 3.7″) about 20% of the observed flares have been found to be double-peaked flares resulting from separate flares, one in each component. A direct flare triggering of the following flare by the preceding one can be ruled out since the light travel-time between the two components is 3.5 h, while the observed time delay between the flare peaks is about 10 min. Moreover, the proximity effect does not seem to play an important triggering role.It is concluded that, although the analogy with solar ‘sympathetic’ flares is not always applicable, it is the most promising framework within which the majority of double-peaked flare events on red dwarfs must be interpreted.


2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (S240) ◽  
pp. 496-498
Author(s):  
K. Shabun ◽  
A. Richichi ◽  
U. Munari ◽  
A. Siviero ◽  
B. Pacsysnki

AbstractBinary and multiple systems constitute one of the main tools for obtaining fundamental stellar parameters, such as masses, radii, effective temperatures and distances. One especially fortunate, and at the same time rare, occurrence is that of double-lined eclipsing binaries with well-detached components. In this special case, it is possible to obtain a full solution of all orbital and stellar parameters, with the exception of the effective temperature of one star, which is normally estimated from spectral type or derived from atmospheric analysis of the spectrum. Long-baseline interferometry at facilities such as the ESO VLTI is beginning to have the capability to measure directly the angular separation and the angular diameter of some selected eclipsing binary systems, and we have proposed such observations with the AMBER instrument. In particular, we aim at deriving directly the effective temperature of at least one of the components in the proposed system, thereby avoiding any assumptions in the global solution through the Wilson–Devinney method. We will also obtain an independent check of the results of this latter method for the distance to the system. This represents the first step towards a global calibration of eclipsing binaries as distance indicators. Our results will also contribute to the effective temperature scale for hot stars. The extension of this approach to a wider sample of eclipsing binaries could provide an independent method to assess the distance to the LMC. The observations will extend accurate empirical calibration to spectral type O9 – B0.


2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 315-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olivier Guyon

Over the last two decades, several thousand exoplanets have been identified, and their study has become a high scientific priority. Direct imaging of nearby exoplanets and the circumstellar disks in which they form and evolve is challenging due to the high contrast ratio and small angular separation relative to the central star. Exoplanets are typically within 1 arcsec of, and between 4 and 10 orders of magnitude fainter than, the stars they orbit. To meet these challenges, ground-based telescopes must be equipped with extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) systems optimized to acquire high-contrast images of the immediate surrounding of nearby bright stars. Current ExAO systems have the sensitivity to image thermal emission from young massive planets in near-IR, while future systems deployed on Giant Segmented Mirror Telescopes will image starlight reflected by lower-mass rocky planets. Thanks to rapid progress in optical coronagraphy, wavefront control, and data analysis techniques, direct imaging and spectroscopic characterization of habitable exoplanets will be within reach of the next generation of large ground-based telescopes.


2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (S299) ◽  
pp. 44-45
Author(s):  
Jérôme Maire ◽  
Jonathan Gagné ◽  
David Lafrenière ◽  
James R. Graham ◽  
René Doyon

RésuméDirect imaging and spectroscopy of exoplanets is a key element for understanding planet formation and migration. Such direct detections and characterizations remains technologically challenging, since a very high contrast ratio and small angular separation are involved, and futhermore speckle noise limits the high-contrast imaging performance. We further discuss a speckle subtraction and suppression technique that fully takes advantage of spectral and time-domain information on quasi-static speckles to measure the highest-fidelity photometry as well as accurate astrometry of detected companions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 162 (6) ◽  
pp. 276
Author(s):  
Yang-Wei Zhang ◽  
Yang Huang ◽  
Jin-Ming Bai ◽  
Xiao-Wei Liu ◽  
Jian-guo Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract As the third installment in a series systematically searching dual active galactic nuclei (AGN) among merging galaxies, we present the results of 20 dual AGNs found by using the SDSS fiber spectra. To reduce the flux contamination from both the fiber aperture and seeing effects, the angular separation of two cores in our merging galaxy pairs sample is restricted at least larger than 3″. By careful analysis of the emission lines, 20 dual AGNs are identified from 61 merging galaxies with their two cores both observed by the SDSS spectroscopic surveys. 15 of them are identified for the first time. The identification efficiency is about 32.79% (20/61), comparable to our former results (16 dual AGNs identified from 41 merging galaxies) based on the long-slit spectroscopy. Interestingly, two of the 20 dual AGNs show two prominent cores in radio images and their radio powers show they as the radio-excess AGNs. So far, 31 dual AGNs are found by our project and this is the current largest dual AGN sample, ever constructed with a consistent approach. This sample, together with more candidates from ongoing observations, is of vital importance to study the AGN physics and the coevolution between the supermassive black holes and their host galaxies.


1996 ◽  
Vol 169 ◽  
pp. 615-616
Author(s):  
V.R. Shoutenkov

The possibility to study magnetic field of the Galaxy calculating correlation or structure functions of synchrotron background radio emission have been known long ago (Kaplan and Pikel'ner (1963); Getmantsev (1958)). But this method had not been as popular as other methods of magnetic field studies. However theoretical calculations made by Chibisov and Ptuskin (1981) showed that correlation functions of intensity of synchrotron background radio emission can give a lot of valuable information about galactic magnetic fields because of the intensity of synchrotron background radio emission depends on H⊥. According to this theory correlation C(θ, φ) and structure S(θ, φ) functions of intensity, as functions of angular separation θ between two lines of sight and position angle φ on the sky between this two lines of sight, can be presented as a sum of isotropic (not dependent from angle φ) and anisotropic parts:


1985 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 97-119
Author(s):  
Harold A. McAlister

With the advent of speckle interferometry, high angular resolution has begun to play a routine role in the study of binary stars. Speckle and other interferometric techniques not only bring enhanced resolution to this classic and fundamental field but provide an equally important gain in observational accuracy. These methods also offer the potential for performing accurate differential photometry for binary stars of very small angular separation. This paper reviews the achievements of modern interferometric techniques in measuring stellar masses and luminosities and discusses the special calibration problems encountered in binary star interferometry. The future possibilities for very high angular resolution studies of close binaries are also described.


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