The Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign: The Frequency of Giant Planets around Young B and A Stars

ArXiv 1306.1233 (2013)

Authors:

Eric L Nielsen, Michael C Liu, Zahed Wahhaj, Beth A Biller, Thomas L Hayward, Laird M Close, Jared R Males, Andrew J Skemer, Mark Chun, Christ Ftaclas, Silvia HP Alencar, Pawel Artymowicz, Alan Boss, Fraser Clarke, Elisabete de Gouveia Dal Pino, Jane Gregorio-Hetem, Markus Hartung, Shigeru Ida, Marc Kuchner, Douglas NC Lin, I Neill Reid, Evgenya L Shkolnik, Matthias Tecza, Niranjan Thatte, Douglas W Toomey

Abstract:

We have carried out high contrast imaging of 70 young, nearby B and A stars to search for brown dwarf and planetary companions as part of the Gemini NICI Planet-Finding Campaign. Our survey represents the largest, deepest survey for planets around high-mass stars (~1.5-2.5 M_sun) conducted to date and includes the planet hosts beta Pic and Fomalhaut. We obtained follow-up astrometry of all candidate companions within 400 AU projected separation for stars in uncrowded fields and identified new low-mass companions to HD 1160 and HIP 79797. We have found that the previously known young brown dwarf companion to HIP 79797 is itself a tight (3 AU) binary, composed of brown dwarfs with masses 58 (+21, -20) M_Jup and 55 (+20, -19) M_Jup, making this system one of the rare substellar binaries in orbit around a star. Considering the contrast limits of our NICI data and the fact that we did not detect any planets, we use high-fidelity Monte Carlo simulations to show that fewer than 20% of 2 M_sun stars can have giant planets greater than 4 M_Jup between 59 and 460 AU at 95% confidence, and fewer than 10% of these stars can have a planet more massive than 10 M_Jup between 38 and 650 AU. Overall, we find that large-separation giant planets are not common around B and A stars: fewer than 10% of B and A stars can have an analog to the HR 8799 b (7 M_Jup, 68 AU) planet at 95% confidence. We also describe a new Bayesian technique for determining the ages of field B and A stars from photometry and theoretical isochrones. Our method produces more plausible ages for high-mass stars than previous age-dating techniques, which tend to underestimate stellar ages and their uncertainties.

A highly unequal-mass eclipsing M-dwarf binary in the WFCAM Transit Survey

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 431:4 (2013) 3240-3257

Authors:

SV Nefs, JL Birkby, IAG Snellen, ST Hodgkin, BM Sipőcz, G Kovács, D Mislis, DJ Pinfield, EL Martin

Detection of carbon monoxide in the high-resolution day-side spectrum of the exoplanet HD 189733b⋆

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 554 (2013) a82

Authors:

RJ de Kok, M Brogi, IAG Snellen, J Birkby, S Albrecht, EJW de Mooij

Upper limits for PH3 and H2S in Titan's atmosphere from Cassini CIRS

Icarus 224:1 (2013) 253-256

Authors:

CA Nixon, NA Teanby, PGJ Irwin, SM Hörst

Abstract:

We have searched for the presence of simple P and S-bearing molecules in Titan's atmosphere, by looking for the characteristic signatures of phosphine and hydrogen sulfide in infrared spectra obtained by Cassini CIRS. As a result we have placed the first upper limits on the stratospheric abundances, which are 1ppb (PH3) and 330ppb (H2S), at the 2-σ significance level. © 2013.

The Warming Papers The Scientific Foundation for the Climate Change Forecast

John Wiley & Sons, 2013

Authors:

David Archer, Raymond Pierrehumbert

Abstract:

Global warming is arguably the defining scientific issue of modern times, but it is not widely appreciated that the ... together the classic scientific papers that are the scientific foundation for the forecast of global warming and its consequences.