Discovery of Water at High Spectral Resolution in the Atmosphere of 51 Peg b

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 153:3 (2017) 138-138

Authors:

Jl Birkby, RJ de Kok, M Brogi, H Schwarz, Iag Snellen

EPIC 219388192b—An Inhabitant of the Brown Dwarf Desert in the Ruprecht 147 Open Cluster

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 153:3 (2017) 131

Authors:

Grzegorz Nowak, Enric Palle, Davide Gandolfi, Fei Dai, Antonino F Lanza, Teruyuki Hirano, Oscar Barragán, Akihiko Fukui, Hans Bruntt, Michael Endl, William D Cochran, Pier G Prada Moroni, Jorge Prieto-Arranz, Amanda Kiilerich, David Nespral, Artie P Hatzes, Simon Albrecht, Hans Deeg, Joshua N Winn, Liang Yu, Masayuki Kuzuhara, Sascha Grziwa, Alexis MS Smith, Eike W Guenther, Vincent Van Eylen, Szilard Csizmadia, Malcolm Fridlund, Juan Cabrera, Philipp Eigmüller, Anders Erikson, Judith Korth, Norio Narita, Martin Pätzold, Heike Rauer, Ignasi Ribas

K2-60b and K2-107b. A Sub-Jovian and a Jovian Planet from the K2 Mission

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 153:3 (2017) 130

Authors:

Philipp Eigmüller, Davide Gandolfi, Carina M Persson, Paolo Donati, Malcolm Fridlund, Szilard Csizmadia, Oscar Barragán, Alexis MS Smith, Juan Cabrera, Judith Korth, Sascha Grziwa, Jorge Prieto-Arranz, David Nespral, Joonas Saario, William D Cochran, Felice Cusano, Hans J Deeg, Michael Endl, Anders Erikson, Eike W Guenther, Artie P Hatzes, Martin Pätzold, Heike Rauer

Radial gradients in initial mass function sensitive absorption features in the Coma brightest cluster galaxies

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 465:1 (2017) 192-212

Authors:

S Zieleniewski, RCW Houghton, N Thatte, RL Davies, SP Vaughan

Observational evidence against strongly stabilizing tropical cloud feedbacks

Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union 44:3 (2017) 1503-1510

Authors:

IN Williams, Raymond Pierrehumbert

Abstract:

We present a method to attribute cloud radiative feedbacks to convective processes, using sub-cloud layer buoyancy as a diagnostic of stable and deep convective regimes. Applying this approach to tropical remote-sensing measurements over years 2000-2016 shows that an inferred negative short-term cloud feedback from deep convection was nearly offset by a positive cloud feedback from stable regimes. The net cloud feedback was within statistical uncertainty of the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model (CAM5) with historical forcings, with discrepancies in the partitioning of the cloud feedback into convective regimes. Compensation between high-cloud responses to tropics-wide warming in stable and unstable regimes resulted in smaller net changes in high-cloud fraction with warming. In addition, deep convection and associated high clouds set in at warmer temperatures in response to warming, as a consequence of nearly invariant sub-cloud buoyancy. This invariance further constrained the magnitude of cloud radiative feedbacks, and is consistent with climate model projections.