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Three Faint Companions of Bright Stars Discovered with New Infrared Camera Developed at Penn State
12 June 2002 -- Three small, faint stars, apparently
locked in the gravitational embrace of much larger and brighter companions,
have been discovered in the first light from a new infrared camera with
innovative optics on the 100-inch telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory
in Pasadena, California.
"This is the first time the historic Mount Wilson telescope has looked
at the universe through this new infrared eye, and already it is making
new discoveries," says Jian Ge, assistant professor of astronomy
and astrophysics at Penn State and leader of the research team, which
also developed the infrared camera. The discoveries of the faint stars,
to be published in the June issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters
and the July issue of the Astronomical Journal, "mark the
beginning of a new era in the use of the 100-inch telescope for discovering
very interesting faint objects in orbit around brighter stars, such as
brown dwarfs, which are neither stars nor planets," says Robert
Jastrow, director of the Mount Wilson Institute.
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| A Gaussian pupil mask designed for deep contrast imaging for faint companions around bright stars. This is the new generation coronagraph technique being supported by NASA for further technology development for the Terrestrial Planet Finder. |
One innovative technique that Ge and his team designed into the new infrared
camera is a specially shaped mask they installed over the "pupil"
of the camera's eye to allow fainter companions to be seen around bright
objects. The shaped pupil mask that Ge's team used is an improvement over
the circular masks that astronomers have been using to block the light
from a bright star in an attempt to see a near-by fainter object, much
like the appearance of the corona during a total eclipse of the Sun. The
shaped pupil mask is a solid light-blocking circle into which Ge and his
team have cut a dozen strategically placed eye-shaped openings. "The
image resulting from the first use of the device revealed areas of greater
contrast that allowed us to find one of the faint dwarf stars," Ge
says. "The technique potentially improves contrast in images by more
than tenfold compared to current techniques."
This new technique was proposed in 2001 by David Spergel at Princeton
University, who comments, "This is an exciting and beautiful result.
Jian and his team have done a remarkable job in taking a theoretical concept
and using it to obtain an exciting scientific result. This type of coronagraph
likely will be the principal instrument on the successor to the Hubble
Space Telescope--an instrument capable of imaging Earth-like planets around
nearby stars. Jian's work at Mount Wilson is a pathfinder for the Terrestrial
Planet Finder being planned by NASA."
The dwarf stars Ge and his team discovered are less than one-tenth the
mass of the Sun and give off a dark-red glow that is dimmer than our hotter
Sun's yellow light. One of the stars is about 50 light years from Earth,
another is about 27 light years away, and the third is at a distance of
about 200 light years. Astronomers consider these stars to be nearby in
our solar system's corner of the galaxy. "Our initial conservative
estimate is that these are little very-dark-red dwarf stars," says
Abhijit Chakraborty, a postdoctoral scholar on Ge's team. "Their
mass is only about 80 to 100 times that of Jupiter, which itself is a
thousand times smaller than our Sun. They have barely enough mass to burn
the hydrogen in their cores, and are close to the size and luminosity
of less-massive brown-dwarf objects, which don't have enough mass to ignite
into stars at all."
Astronomers are in need of new techniques for imaging a dim object such
as an Earth-like planet near a bright star like our Sun because, with
current techniques, the star's brightness hides its dimmer near-by companions.
"This discovery demonstrates that our new techniques can help reveal
dim companions of larger, brighter stars," says John H. Debes,
a graduate student in Ge's lab. "These three first-light discoveries
demonstrate the potential to use the Mount Wilson and similar telescopes
to obtain much better images in high-contrast situations."
Telescopes at the Mount Wilson Observatory have been used since 1908 to
make important discoveries about the expansion of the universe, the location
of galaxies, and the size of stars, paving the way for the era of modern
astronomy. In the mid 1990s, the observatory was upgraded with advanced
"adaptive optics" technology, which compensates for image distortions
caused by the turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere. "Adaptive optics
takes away the twinkling that you see when you look up at the stars in
the night sky" Jastrow explains. "Adding adaptive optics made
the image quality of the Mount Wilson telescope ten times sharper--as
good as if the telescope were in orbit above the Earth's atmosphere."
But light pollution from nearby Los Angeles limited the telescope's capabilities
in visible light, so Ge decided to build a camera that would capture infrared
light coming from objects in space. One advantage of using infrared light
is that it cuts right through optical light pollution. Another advantage
is that a comparatively cool object like a brown dwarf glows most brightly
in infrared wavelengths. "We developed the Penn State IR Imager and
Spectrograph (PIRIS) to be a test bed for new infrared technology to image
faint objects, including planets, for the Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF)
mission," explains Ge, who recently joined TPF teams at Princeton
University and Ball Aerospace & Technologies Inc. that are studying
coronagraph technology.
Ge also has invented and developed other instrument technologies that
he and his colleagues at Penn State are in the process of developing further
as part of his lab's $2-million instrumentation program for the discovery
of extra-solar planets--including Earth-like planets--and galaxies in
the early stages of their formation. "We are using our PIRIS camera
and the 100-inch Mount Wilson telescope to test a suite of components
that we are developing for getting better images and better spectroscopy
from infrared instruments," Ge says. The researchers also are working
to improve the compactness and reduce the cost of these instruments so
they can be used on space telescopes, where size and weight are at the
highest premium, as well as on other large ground-based telescopes.
"We hope these observing techniques will help us find and study many
fainter dwarf stars and massive planets in binary systems so we can learn
how planets form within such systems," Ge says. A tested theory of
planet formation would help to point astronomers toward stars that are
most likely to have Earth-like planets orbiting them. "None of the
planets discovered elsewhere in the universe up to now have been very
much like our Earth," Ge comments. "The challenge now is to
find Earth-like planets around other stars."
This research was supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
and the Penn State Eberly College of Science.
[ B K K ]
CONTACTS AT PENN STATE:
Jian Ge: jian@astro.psu.edu or
+1-814-863-9553
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): science@psu.edu
or +1-814-863-4682
CONTACTS AT THE MOUNT WILSON OBSERVATORY:
Robert Jastrow: 310-441-9136, or by e-mail through Kate Barlow: mtwilsoninst3@earthlink.net
Bob Eklund (PIO): BEklund@sprynet.com
or +1-310-333-3478
ABOUT THE MOUNT WILSON OBSERVATORY:
http://www.mtwilson.edu
High-resolution images are available to reporters for publication. Contact Barbara K. Kennedy at science@psu.edu or (+)1-814-863-4682.
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The star mu Her and its faint companion Near-Infrared image of the star mu Her and its companion, which are located 27 light years away from Earth. The image was taken with the Gaussian shaped pupil mask, the new generation coronagraph technique for the TPF mission being planned by NASA. This is the first time this new technique, proposed by Dr. David Spergel at Princeton University, was tested with star light, showing its promise for high-contrast imaging, which could eventually be used to detect Earth-like planets. |
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The star HD190067 and its faint companion Near-IR image of HD190067 and its faint companion, which are 50 light years away from Earth. The image was taken with adaptive optics only. |
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The star HIP 13855 and its faint companion Near-IR image of HIP 13855 and its faint companion, which are 200 light years away from Earth. The image was taken with adaptive optics only. |
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PIRIS mounted on the historic Mt. Wilson 100-inch telescope in October 2001 |
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