Search Publications

Revisiting the Phase Curves of WASP-43b: Confronting Re-analyzed Spitzer Data with Cloudy Atmospheres
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aaaebc Bibcode: 2018AJ....155..150M

Mendonça, João M.; Demory, Brice-Olivier; Heng, Kevin +1 more

Recently acquired Hubble and Spitzer phase curves of the short-period hot Jupiter WASP-43b make it an ideal target for confronting theory with data. On the observational front, we re-analyze the 3.6 and 4.5 µm Spitzer phase curves and demonstrate that our improved analysis better removes residual red noise due to intra-pixel sensitivity, whi…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
eHST 88
Zodiacal Exoplanets in Time (ZEIT). VIII. A Two-planet System in Praesepe from K2 Campaign 16
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aadf37 Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..195R

Vanderburg, Andrew; Rizzuto, Aaron C.; Kraus, Adam L. +5 more

Young planets offer a direct view of the formation and evolution processes that produced the diverse population of mature exoplanet systems known today. The repurposed Kepler mission K2 is providing the first sample of young transiting planets by observing populations of stars in nearby, young clusters and stellar associations. We report the detec…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia 87
An HST/WFC3 Thermal Emission Spectrum of the Hot Jupiter HAT-P-7b
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aac497 Bibcode: 2018AJ....156...10M

Fortney, Jonathan J.; Stevenson, Kevin B.; Désert, Jean-Michel +7 more

Secondary eclipse observations of several of the hottest hot Jupiters show featureless, blackbody-like spectra or molecular emission features, which are consistent with thermal inversions being present in those atmospheres. Theory predicts a transition between warmer atmospheres with thermal inversions and cooler atmospheres without inversions, bu…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
eHST 86
Cepheid Abundances: Multiphase Results and Spatial Gradients
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aadcac Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..171L

Luck, R. Earle

Parameters and abundances have been derived for 435 Cepheids based on an analysis of 1127 spectra. Results from five or more phases are available for 52 of the program stars. The latter set of stars span periods between 1.5 and 68 days. The parameters and abundances show excellent consistency across phase. For iron, the average range in the determ…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia 85
Kinematics of Highly r-process-enhanced Field Stars: Evidence for an Accretion Origin and Detection of Several Groups from Disrupted Satellites
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aadd9c Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..179R

Hattori, Kohei; Roederer, Ian U.; Valluri, Monica

We present the kinematics of 35 highly r-process-enhanced ([Eu/Fe] ≥ +0.7) metal-poor (-3.8 < [Fe/H] < -1.4) field stars. We calculate six-dimensional positions and velocities, evaluate energies and integrals of motion, and compute orbits for each of these stars using parallaxes and proper motions from the second Gaia data release and publis…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia 80
WFIRST Exoplanet Mass-measurement Method Finds a Planetary Mass of 39 ± 8 M for OGLE-2012-BLG-0950Lb
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aaed46 Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..289B

Bennett, D. P.; Udalski, A.; Anderson, J. +13 more

We present the analysis of the simultaneous high-resolution images from the Hubble Space Telescope and Keck adaptive optics system of the planetary event OGLE-2012-BLG-0950 that determine that the system consists of a 0.58 ± 0.04 {M} host star orbited by a 39 ± 8 {M}\oplus planet at a projected separation of 2.54 ± 0.23 au…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
eHST 78
Time-resolved WISE/NEOWISE Coadds
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aacbcd Bibcode: 2018AJ....156...69M

Lang, D.; Meisner, A. M.; Schlegel, D. J.

We have used the first ∼3 years of 3.4 µm (W1) and 4.6 µm (W2) observations from the WISE and NEOWISE missions to create a full-sky set of time-resolved coadds. As a result of the WISE survey strategy, a typical sky location is visited every six months and is observed during ≳12 exposures per visit, with these exposures spanning a ∼1 d…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia 77
Different Stellar Rotations in the Two Main Sequences of the Young Globular Cluster NGC 1818: The First Direct Spectroscopic Evidence
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aad3cd Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..116M

Milone, A. P.; Marino, A. F.; D'Antona, F. +4 more

We present a spectroscopic analysis of main sequence (MS) stars in the young globular cluster NGC 1818 (age ∼40 Myr) in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Our photometric survey of Magellanic Clouds clusters has revealed that NGC 1818, similar to other young objects with ages ≲600 Myr, displays not only an extended MS turnoff (eMSTO), as observed in inte…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia eHST 67
ExoGAN: Retrieving Exoplanetary Atmospheres Using Deep Convolutional Generative Adversarial Networks
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aae77c Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..268Z

Zingales, Tiziano; Waldmann, Ingo P.

Atmospheric retrievals on exoplanets usually involve computationally intensive Bayesian sampling methods. Large parameter spaces and increasingly complex atmospheric models create a computational bottleneck forcing a trade-off between statistical sampling accuracy and model complexity. It is especially true for upcoming JWST and ARIEL observations…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
eHST 67
The LEECH Exoplanet Imaging Survey: Limits on Planet Occurrence Rates under Conservative Assumptions
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aaec00 Bibcode: 2018AJ....156..286S

Fortney, Jonathan J.; De Rosa, Robert J.; Weigelt, Gerd +33 more

We present the results of the largest L‧ (3.8 µm) direct imaging survey for exoplanets to date, the Large Binocular Telescope Interferometer Exozodi Exoplanet Common Hunt (LEECH). We observed 98 stars with spectral types from B to M. Cool planets emit a larger share of their flux in L‧ compared to shorter wavelengths, affording LEECH an adva…

2018 The Astronomical Journal
Gaia 66