152 results on '"Stanek, K Z"'
Search Results
2. Fabry-Perot Absorption Line Spectroscopy of the Galactic Bar. I. Kinematics
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Rangwala, Naseem, Williams, T. B., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We use Fabry-Perot absorption line imaging spectroscopy to measure radial velocities using the Ca II 8542 line in 3360 stars towards three lines of sight in the Milky Way's bar: Baade's Window and offset position at (l,b) ~ (+-5.0, -3.5). This sample includes 2488 bar red clump giants, 339 bar M/K-giants, and 318 disk main sequence stars. We measure the first four moments of the stellar velocity distribution of the red clump giants, and find it to be symmetric and flat-topped. We also measure the line-of-sight average velocity and dispersion of the red clump giants as a function of distance in the bar. We detect stellar streams at the near and far side of the bar with velocity difference > 30 km/s at l = +-5, but we do not detect two separate streams in Baade's Window. Our M-giants kinematics agree well with previous studies, but have dispersions systematically lower than those of the red clump giants by ~ 10 km/s. For the disk main sequence stars we measure a velocity dispersion of ~ 45 km/s for all three lines-of-sight, placing a majority of them in the thin disk within 3.5 kpc of the Sun, associated with the Sagittarius spiral arm. We measure the equivalent widths of the Ca II 8542 line that can be used to infer metallicities. We find indications of a metallicity gradient with Galactic longitude, with greater metallicity in Baade's Window. We find the bulge to be metal-rich, consistent with some previous studies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal,16 pages, 12 figures
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- 2008
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3. Deep MMT Transit Survey of the Open Cluster M37 IV: Limit on the Fraction of Stars With Planets as Small as 0.3 R_J
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Hartman, J. D., Gaudi, B. S., Holman, M. J., McLeod, B. A., Stanek, K. Z., Barranco, J. A., Pinsonneault, M. H., Meibom, S., and Kalirai, J. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a deep (15 ~< r ~< 23), 20 night survey for transiting planets in the intermediate age open cluster M37 (NGC 2099) using the Megacam wide-field mosaic CCD camera on the 6.5m MMT. We do not detect any transiting planets among the ~1450 observed cluster members. We do, however, identify a ~ 1 R_J candidate planet transiting a ~ 0.8 Msun Galactic field star with a period of 0.77 days. The source is faint (V = 19.85 mag) and has an expected velocity semi-amplitude of K ~ 220 m/s (M/M_J). We conduct Monte Carlo transit injection and recovery simulations to calculate the 95% confidence upper limit on the fraction of cluster members and field stars with planets as a function of planetary radius and orbital period. Assuming a uniform logarithmic distribution in orbital period, we find that < 1.1%, < 2.7% and < 8.3% of cluster members have 1.0 R_J planets within Extremely Hot Jupiter (EHJ, 0.4 < T < 1.0 day), Very Hot Jupiter (VHJ, 1.0 < T < 3.0 days) and Hot Jupiter (HJ, 3.0 < T < 5.0 days) period ranges respectively. For 0.5 R_J planets the limits are < 3.2%, and < 21% for EHJ and VHJ period ranges, while for 0.35 R_J planets we can only place an upper limit of < 25% on the EHJ period range. For a sample of 7814 Galactic field stars, consisting primarily of FGKM dwarfs, we place 95% upper limits of < 0.3%, < 0.8% and < 2.7% on the fraction of stars with 1.0 R_J EHJ, VHJ and HJ assuming the candidate planet is not genuine. If the candidate is genuine, the frequency of ~ 1.0 R_J planets in the EHJ period range is 0.002% < f_EHJ < 0.5% with 95% confidence. We place limits of < 1.4%, < 8.8% and < 47% for 0.5 R_J planets, and a limit of < 16% on 0.3 R_J planets in the EHJ period range. This is the first transit survey to place limits on the fraction of stars with planets as small as Neptune., Comment: 61 pages, 19 figures, 5 tables, replaced with the version accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2008
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4. Microlensing Event MOA-2007-BLG-400: Exhuming the Buried Signature of a Cool, Jovian-Mass Planet
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Dong, Subo, Bond, I. A., Gould, A., Kozlowski, Szymon, Miyake, N., Gaudi, B. S., Bennett, D. P., Abe, F., Gilmore, A. C., Fukui, A., Furusawa, K., Hearnshaw, J. B., Itow, Y., Kamiya, K., Kilmartin, P. M., Korpela, A., Lin, W., Ling, C. H., Masuda, K., Matsubara, Y., Muraki, Y., Nagaya, M., Ohnishi, K., Okumura, T., Perrott, Y. C., Rattenbury, N., Saito, To., Sako, T., Sato, S., Skuljan, L., Sullivan, D. J., Sumi, T., Sweatman, W., Tristram, P. J., Yock, P. C. M., Bolt, G., Christie, G. W., DePoy, D. L., Han, C., Janczak, J., Lee, C. -U., Mallia, F., McCormick, J., Monard, B., Maury, A., Natusch, T., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Santallo, R., Stanek, K. Z., Udalski, A., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Pietrzynski, G., Soszynski, I., Szewczyk, O., Wyrzykowski, L., and Ulaczyk, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of the cool, Jovian-mass planet MOA-2007-BLG-400Lb. The planet was detected in a high-magnification microlensing event (with peak magnification A_max = 628) in which the primary lens transited the source, resulting in a dramatic smoothing of the peak of the event. The angular extent of the region of perturbation due to the planet is significantly smaller than the angular size of the source, and as a result the planetary signature is also smoothed out by the finite source size. Thus the deviation from a single-lens fit is broad and relatively weak (~ few percent). Nevertheless, we demonstrate that the planetary nature of the deviation can be unambiguously ascertained from the gross features of the residuals, and detailed analysis yields a fairly precise planet/star mass ratio of q = 0.0026+/-0.0004, in accord with the large significance (\Delta\chi^2=1070) of the detection. The planet/star projected separation is subject to a strong close/wide degeneracy, leading to two indistinguishable solutions that differ in separation by a factor of ~8.5. Upper limits on flux from the lens constrain its mass to be M < 0.75 M_Sun (assuming it is a main-sequence star). A Bayesian analysis that includes all available observational constraints indicates a primary in the Galactic bulge with a mass of ~0.2-0.5 M_Sun and thus a planet mass of ~ 0.5-1.3 M_Jupiter. The separation and equilibrium temperature are ~0.6-1.1AU (~5.3-9.7AU) and ~103K (~34K) for the close (wide) solution. If the primary is a main-sequence star, follow-up observations would enable the detection of its light and so a measurement of its mass and distance., Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to ApJ
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- 2008
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5. Outliers from the Mass--Metallicity Relation II: A Sample of Massive Metal-Poor Galaxies from SDSS
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Peeples, Molly S., Pogge, Richard W., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a sample of 42 high-mass low-metallicity outliers from the mass--metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies. These galaxies have stellar masses that span log(M_*/M_sun) ~9.4 to 11.1 and are offset from the mass--metallicity relation by -0.3 to -0.85 dex in 12+log(O/H). In general, they are extremely blue, have high star formation rates for their masses, and are morphologically disturbed. Tidal interactions are expected to induce large-scale gas inflow to the galaxies' central regions, and we find that these galaxies' gas-phase oxygen abundances are consistent with large quantities of low-metallicity gas from large galactocentric radii diluting the central metal-rich gas. We conclude with implications for deducing gas-phase metallicities of individual galaxies based solely on their luminosities, specifically in the case of long gamma-ray burst host galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 11 pages, 11 figures
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- 2008
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6. A New Class of Luminous Transients and A First Census of Their Massive Stellar Progenitors
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Thompson, Todd A., Prieto, Jose L., Stanek, K. Z., Kistler, Matthew D., Beacom, John F., and Kochanek, Christopher S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The progenitors of SN 2008S and the 2008 transient in NGC300 were dust-enshrouded, with extremely red mid-infrared (MIR) colors and relatively low luminosities. The transients were optically faint (-13 < M_V < -15) compared to normal core-collapse supernovae (SNe), and their spectra exhibited narrow emission lines. These events are unique among transient-progenitor pairs and hence constitute a new class. Whether they are true SNe or bright massive-star eruptions, we argue that their rate is ~20% of the SN rate. This fact is remarkable in light of the observation that a very small fraction of all massive stars have the MIR colors of the SN 2008S and NGC300 progenitors, as we show using MIR and optical luminosity, color, and variability properties of massive stars in M33. We find that the fraction of massive stars with colors consistent with these progenitors is 1/10000. In fact, only < 10 similar objects exist in M33 - all of which lie at the luminous red extremum of the AGB sequence. That these transients are relatively common with respect to SNe, while their progenitors are rare compared to the massive star population, implies that the dust-enshrouded phase is a short-lived phase in the lives of many massive stars. This shrouded epoch can occur only in the last ~10^4 yr before explosion, be it death or merely eruption. We discuss the implications of this finding for the evolution and census of ``low-mass'' massive stars (8-12 Msun), and we connect it with theoretical discussions of electron-capture SNe and the explosive birth of white dwarfs. A systematic census with (warm) Spitzer of galaxies in the local universe for analogous progenitors would significantly improve our knowledge of this channel to massive stellar explosions, and potentially to others with obscured progenitors. (Abridged), Comment: 24 pages; revised in response to referee's comments; conclusions unchanged, discussion updated
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- 2008
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7. Using Ultra Long Period Cepheids to Extend the Cosmic Distance Ladder to 100 Mpc and Beyond
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Bird, Jonathan C., Stanek, K. Z., and Prieto, Jose L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We examine the properties of 17 long period (80-180 days) and very luminous (median absolute magnitude of M_I= -7.93 and M_V= -7.03) Cepheids to see if they can serve as an useful distance indicator. We find that these Ultra Long Period (ULP) Cepheids have a relatively shallow Period-Luminosity (PL) relation, so in fact they are more "standard candle"-like than classical Cepheids. In the reddening-free Wesenheit index, the slope of the ULP PL relation is ~10 times less steep than the standard PL relation for the SMC Cepheids. The scatter of our sample about the W_I PL relation is 0.22 mag, approaching that of classical Cepheids and Type Ia Supernovae. We expect this scatter to decrease as bigger and more uniform samples of ULP Cepheids are obtained. We also measure a non-zero period derivative for one ULP Cepheid (SMC HV829) and use the result to probe evolutionary models and mass loss of massive stars. ULP Cepheids main advantage over classical Cepheids is that they are more luminous, and as such show great potential as stellar distance indicators to galaxies up to 100 Mpc and beyond., Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJ. 11 pages, 8 figures
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- 2008
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8. Outliers from the Mass--Metallicity Relation I: A Sample of Metal-Rich Dwarf Galaxies from SDSS
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Peeples, Molly S., Pogge, Richard W., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have identified a sample of 41 low-mass high--oxygen abundance outliers from the mass--metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies measured by Tremonti et al (2004). These galaxies, which have 8.6 < [12 + log(O/H)] < 9.3 over a range of -14.4 > M_B > -19.1 and 7.4 < log M_*/M_solar < 10, are surprisingly non-pathological. They have typical specific star formation rates, are fairly isolated and, with few exceptions, have no obvious companions. Morphologically, they are similar to dwarf spheroidal or dwarf elliptical galaxies. We predict that their observed high oxygen abundances are due to relatively low gas masses, concluding that these are transitional dwarf galaxies nearing the end of their star formation activity., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2008
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9. A large-scale survey for variable stars in M33
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Bersier, D., Hartman, J. D., Stanek, K. Z., Beaulieu, J. -P., Kaluzny, J., Marquette, J. -B., Schwarzenberg-Czerny, A., Scowcroft, V., and Stetson, P. B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have started a survey of M 33 in order to find variable stars and Cepheids in particular. We have obtained more than 30 epochs of g'r'i' data with the CFHT and the one-square-degree camera MegaCam. We present first results from this survey, including the search for variable objects and a basic characterization of the various groups of variable stars., Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the "Nonlinear stellar hydrodynamics", conference in honor of Robert Buchler's 65th birthday, July 2007, Paris
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- 2008
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10. Deep MMT Transit Survey of the Open Cluster M37 III: Stellar Rotation at 550 Myr
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Hartman, J. D., Gaudi, B. S., Pinsonneault, M. H., Stanek, K. Z., Holman, M. J., McLeod, B. A., Meibom, S., Barranco, J. A., and Kalirai, J. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In the course of conducting a deep (14.5 ~< r ~< 23), 20 night survey for transiting planets in the rich ~550 Myr old open cluster M37 we have measured the rotation periods of 575 stars which lie near the cluster main sequence, with masses 0.2 Msun ~< M ~< 1.3 Msun. This is the largest sample of rotation periods for a cluster older than 500 Myr. Using this rich sample we investigate a number of relations between rotation period, color and the amplitude of photometric variability. Stars with M >~ 0.8 Msun show a tight correlation between period and mass with heavier stars rotating more rapidly. There is a group of 4 stars with P > 15 days that fall well above this relation, which, if real, would present a significant challenge to theories of stellar angular momentum evolution. Below 0.8 Msun the stars continue to follow the period-mass correlation but with a broad tail of rapid rotators that expands to shorter periods with decreasing mass. We combine these results with observations of other open clusters to test the standard theory of lower-main sequence stellar angular momentum evolution. We find that the model reproduces the observations for solar mass stars, but discrepancies are apparent for stars with 0.6 ~< M ~< 1.0 Msun. We also find that for late-K through early-M dwarf stars in this cluster rapid rotators tend to be bluer than slow rotators in B-V but redder than slow rotators in V-I_{C}. This result supports the hypothesis that the significant discrepancy between the observed and predicted temperatures and radii of low-mass main sequence stars is due to stellar activity., Comment: Replaced with version accepted to ApJ. 104 pages, 7 tables, 26 figures
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- 2008
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11. Discovery of the Dust-Enshrouded Progenitor of SN 2008S with Spitzer
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Prieto, J. L., Kistler, M. D., Thompson, T. A., Yuksel, H., Kochanek, C. S., Stanek, K. Z., Beacom, J. F., Martini, P., Pasquali, A., and Bechtold, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of the progenitor of the recent type IIn SN 2008S in the nearby galaxy NGC 6946. Surprisingly, it was not found in deep, pre-explosion optical images of its host galaxy taken with the Large Binocular Telescope, but only through examination of archival Spitzer mid-IR data. A source coincident with the SN 2008S position is clearly detected in the 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 micron IRAC bands, showing no evident variability in the three years prior to the explosion, yet is undetected at 3.6 and 24 micron. The distinct presence of ~440 K dust, along with stringent LBT limits on the optical fluxes, suggests that the progenitor of SN 2008S was engulfed in a shroud of its own dust. The inferred luminosity of 3.5x10^4 Lsun implies a modest mass of ~10 Msun. We conclude that objects like SN 2008S are not exclusively associated with the deaths or outbursts of very massive eta Carinae-like objects. This conclusion holds based solely on the optical flux limits even if our identification of the progenitor with the mid-IR source is incorrect., Comment: ApJ letters, in press; corrected a typo
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- 2008
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12. A Survey About Nothing: Monitoring a Million Supergiants for Failed Supernovae
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Kochanek, C. S., Beacom, J. F., Kistler, M. D., Prieto, J. L., Stanek, K. Z., Thompson, T. A., and Yuksel, H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Extragalactic transient searches have historically been limited to looking for the appearance of new sources such as supernovae. It is now possible to carry out a new kind of survey that will do the opposite, that is, search for the disappearance of massive stars. This will entail the systematic observation of galaxies within a distance of 10 Mpc in order to watch ~10^6 supergiants. Reaching this critical number ensures that something will occur yearly, since these massive stars must end their lives with a core collapse within ~10^6 years. Using deep imaging and image subtraction it is possible to determine the fates of these stars whether they end with a bang (supernova) or a whimper (fall out of sight). Such a survey would place completely new limits on the total rate of all core collapses, which is critical for determining the validity of supernova models. It would also determine the properties of supernova progenitors, better characterize poorly understood optical transients, such as eta Carina-like mass ejections, find and characterize large numbers of Cepheids, luminous blue variables and eclipsing binaries, and allow the discovery of any new phenomena that inhabit this relatively unexplored parameter space., Comment: final version, 7 pages, 5 figures, ApJ in press
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- 2008
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13. Short-Hard Gamma-Ray Bursts in Young Host Galaxies: the Effect of Prompt Twins
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Belczynski, Krzysztof, Stanek, K. Z., and Fryer, Chris L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the effect of including a significant ``binary twin'' population (binaries with almost equal mass stars, q = M2/M1 > 0.95) for the production of double compact objects and some resulting consequences, including LIGO inspiral rate and some properties of short-hard gamma-ray bursts. We employ very optimistic assumptions on the twin fraction (50%) among all binaries, and therefore our calculations place an upper limits on the influence of twins on double compact object populations. We show that for LIGO the effect of including twins is relatively minor: although the merger rates does indeed increase when twins are considered, the rate increase is fairly small (1.5). Also, chirp mass distribution for double compact objects formed with or without twins are almost indistinguishable. If double compact object are short-hard GRB progenitors, including twins in population synthesis calculations does not alter significantly the earlier rate predictions for the event rate. However, for one channel of binary evolution, introducing twins more than doubles the rate of ``very prompt'' NS-NS mergers (time to merger less than 1 Myr) compared to models with the ``flat'' q distribution. In that case, 70% of all NS-NS binaries merge within 100 Myr after their formation, indicating a possibility of a very significant population of ``prompt'' short-hard gamma-ray bursts, associated with star forming galaxies. We also point out that, independent of assumptions, fraction of such prompt neutron star mergers is always high, 35--70%. We note that recent observations (e.g., Berger et al.) indicate that fraction of short-hard GRBs found in young hosts is at least 40% and possibly even 80%., Comment: 12 pages, 1 table, 4 figures (submitted to ApJ)
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- 2007
14. Go Long, Go Deep: Finding Optical Jet Breaks for Swift-Era GRBs with the LBT
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Dai, X., Garnavich, P. M., Prieto, J. L., Stanek, K. Z., Kochanek, C. S., Bechtold, J., Bouche, N., Buschkamp, P., Diolaiti, E., Fan, X., Giallongo, E., Gredel, R., Hill, J. M., Jiang, L., McClellend, C., Milne, P., Pedichini, F., Pogge, R. W., Ragazzoni, R., Rhoads, J., Smareglia, R., Thompson, D., and Wagner, R. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the 8.4m Large Binocular Telescope, we observed six GRB afterglows from 2.8 hours to 30.8 days after the burst triggers to systematically probe the late time behaviors of afterglows including jet breaks, flares, and supernova bumps. We detected five afterglows with Sloan r' magnitudes ranging from 23.0-26.3 mag. The depth of our observations allows us to extend the temporal baseline for measuring jet breaks by another decade in time scale. We detected two jet breaks and a third candidate, all of which are not detectable without deep, late time optical observations. In the other three cases, we do not detect the jet breaks either because of contamination from the host galaxy light, the presence of a supernova bump, or the intrinsic faintness of the optical afterglow. This suggests that the basic picture that GRBs are collimated is still valid and that the apparent lack of Swift jet breaks is due to poorly sampled afterglow light curves, particularly at late times., Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letters, 14 pages, 2 figures
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- 2007
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15. Deep MMT Transit Survey of the Open Cluster M37 II: Variable Stars
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Hartman, J. D., Gaudi, B. S., Holman, M. J., McLeod, B. A., Stanek, K. Z., Barranco, J. A., Pinsonneault, M. H., and Kalirai, J. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have conducted a deep ($15 \la r \la 23$), 20 night survey for transiting planets in the intermediate age ($\sim 550 {\rm Myr}$) open cluster M37 (NGC 2099) using the Megacam wide-field mosaic CCD camera on the 6.5m Multiple Mirror Telescope (MMT). In this paper we present a catalog and light curves for 1445 variable stars; 1430 (99%) of these are new discoveries. We have discovered 20 new eclipsing binaries and 31 new short period ($P < 1 {\rm day}$) pulsating stars. The bulk of the variables are most likely rapidly rotating young low-mass stars, including a substantial number ($\ga 500$) that are members of the cluster. We identify and analyze five particularly interesting individual variables including a previously identified variable which we suggest is probably a hybrid $\gamma$ Doradus/$\delta$ Scuti pulsator, two possible quiescent cataclysmic variables, a detached eclipsing binary (DEB) with at least one $\gamma$ Doradus pulsating component (only the second such variable found in an eclipsing binary), and a low mass ($M_{P} \sim M_{S} \sim 0.6 M_{\odot}$) DEB that is a possible cluster member. A preliminary determination of the physical parameters for the DEB+$\gamma$ Doradus system yields $M_{P} = 1.58 \pm 0.04 M_{\odot}$, $M_{S} = 1.58 \pm 0.04 M_{\odot}$, $R_{P} = 1.39 \pm 0.07 R_{\odot}$ and $R_{S} = 1.38 \pm 0.07 R_{\odot}$., Comment: 73 pages, 30 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Version with high resolution figures available at http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~jhartman/M37_2.ps.gz
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- 2007
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16. Deep MMT Transit Survey of the Open Cluster M37 I: Observations and Cluster Parameters
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Hartman, J. D., Gaudi, B. S., Holman, M. J., McLeod, B. A., Stanek, K. Z., Barranco, J. A., Pinsonneault, M. H., Meibom, S., and Kalirai, J. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have conducted a deep ($15 \la r \la 23$), 20 night survey for transiting planets in the intermediate age open cluster M37 (NGC 2099) using the Megacam wide-field mosaic CCD camera on the 6.5m Multiple Mirror Telescope (MMT). In this paper we describe the observations and data reduction procedures for the survey and analyze the stellar content and dynamical state of the cluster. By combining high resolution spectroscopy with existing $BVI_{C}K_{S}$ and new $gri$ color magnitude diagrams we determine the fundamental cluster parameters: $t = 485 \pm 28$ Myr without overshooting ($t = 550 \pm 30 {\rm Myr}$ with overshooting), $E(B-V) = 0.227 \pm 0.038$, $(m-M)_{V} = 11.57 \pm 0.13$ and $[M/H] = +0.045 \pm 0.044$ which are in good agreement with, though more precise than, previous measurements. We determine the mass function down to $0.3 M_{\odot}$ and use this to estimate the total cluster mass of $3640 \pm 170 M_{\odot}$., Comment: 65 pages, 21 figures, 11 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2007
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17. A Photometric Survey for Variables and Transits in the Field of Praesepe with KELT
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Pepper, Joshua, Stanek, K. Z., Pogge, Richard W., Latham, David W., DePoy, D. L., Siverd, Robert, Poindexter, Shawn, and Sivakoff, Gregory R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) project is a small aperture, wide-angle search for planetary transits of solar-type stars. In this paper, we present the results of a commissioning campaign with the KELT telescope to observe the open cluster Praesepe for 34 nights in early 2005. Lightcurves were obtained for 69,337 stars, out of which we identify 58 long period variables and 152 periodic variables. Sixteen of these are previously known as variable, yielding 194 newly discovered variable stars for which we provide properties and lightcurves. We also searched for planetary-like transits, finding four transit candidates. Follow-up observations indicate that two of the candidates are astrophysical false positives, with two candidates remaining as potential planetary transits., Comment: 45 pages, 16 figures. Submitted to AJ. PDF version with full resolution figures located at http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pepper/kelt.pdf
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- 2007
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18. LBT Discovery of a Yellow Supergiant Eclipsing Binary in the Dwarf Galaxy Holmberg IX
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Prieto, J. L., Stanek, K. Z., Kochanek, C. S., Weisz, D. R., Baruffolo, A., Bechtold, J., Burwitz, V., De Santis, C., Gallozzi, S., Garnavich, P. M., Giallongo, E., Hill, J. M., Pogge, R. W., Ragazzoni, R., Speziali, R., Thompson, D. J., and Wagner, R. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In a variability survey of M81 using the Large Binocular Telescope we have discovered a peculiar eclipsing binary (MV ~ -7.1) in the field of the dwarf galaxy Holmberg IX. It has a period of 272 days and the light curve is well-fit by an overcontact model in which both stars are overflowing their Roche lobes. It is composed by two yellow supergiants (V-I ~ 1 mag, T_eff = 4800 K), rather than the far more common red or blue supergiants. Such systems must be rare. While we failed to find any similar systems in the literature, we did, however note a second example. The SMC F0 supergiant R47 is a bright (MV ~ -7.5) periodic variable whose All Sky Automated Survey (ASAS) light curve is well-fit as a contact binary with a 181 day period. We propose that these systems are the progenitors of supernovae like SN 2004et and SN 2006ov, which appeared to have yellow progenitors. The binary interactions (mass transfer, mass loss) limit the size of the supergiant to give it a higher surface temperature than an isolated star at the same core evolutionary stage. We also discuss the possibility of this variable being a long-period Cepheid., Comment: ApJ Letters, accepted, 15 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, and 1 photometry file
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- 2007
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19. The Future is Now: the Formation of Single Low Mass White Dwarfs in the Solar Neighborhood
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Kilic, Mukremin, Stanek, K. Z., and Pinsonneault, M. H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Low mass helium-core white dwarfs (M < 0.45 Msun) can be produced from interacting binary systems, and traditionally all of them have been attributed to this channel. However, a low mass white dwarf could also result from a single star that experiences severe mass loss on the first ascent giant branch. A large population of low mass He-core white dwarfs has been discovered in the old metal-rich cluster NGC 6791. There is therefore a mechanism in clusters to produce low mass white dwarfs without requiring binary star interactions, and we search for evidence of a similar population in field white dwarfs. We argue that there is a significant field population (of order half of the detected systems) that arises from old metal rich stars which truncate their evolution prior to the helium flash from severe mass loss. There is a consistent absence of evidence for nearby companions in a large fraction of low mass white dwarfs. The number of old metal-rich field dwarfs is also comparable with the apparently single low mass white dwarf population, and our revised estimate for the space density of low mass white dwarfs produced from binary interactions is also compatible with theoretical expectations. This indicates that this channel of stellar evolution, hitherto thought hypothetical only, has been in operation in our own Galaxy for many billions of years. One strong implication of our model is that single low mass white dwarfs should be good targets for planet searches because they are likely to arise from metal-rich progenitors. We also discuss other observational tests and implications, including the potential impact on SN Ia rates and the frequency of planetary nebulae., Comment: ApJ published version
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- 2007
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20. The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT): A Small Robotic Telescope for Large-Area Synoptic Surveys
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Pepper, Joshua, Pogge, Richard W., DePoy, D. L., Marshall, J. L., Stanek, K. Z., Stutz, Amelia M., Poindexter, Shawn, Siverd, Robert, O'Brien, Thomas P., Trueblood, Mark, and Trueblood, Patricia
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) project is a survey for planetary transits of bright stars. It consists of a small-aperture, wide-field automated telescope located at Winer Observatory near Sonoita, Arizona. The telescope surveys a set of 26 x 26 degree fields, together covering about 25% of the Northern sky, targeting stars in the range of 8
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21. A Study of Stellar Photometric Variability Within the Central 4 pc of the Galactic Center with Infrared Image Subtraction
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Peeples, Molly S., Stanek, K. Z., and DePoy, D. L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalog of 110 variable stars within ~1' of Sgr A* based on image subtraction of near-infrared (H and K) photometry. Our images were obtained over 133 nights from 2000--2002 in H-band and over 134 nights from 2001--2002 in K-band; the typical FWHM is 1.4''. We match the catalog to other near-infrared, X-ray, and radio (i.e., maser) data, and we discuss some of the more interesting objects. The catalog includes 14 periodic sources, several known long-period variables and three new LPV candidates. We associate IRS 10* with OH, SiO, and H2O masers and a bright X-ray point source; this analysis suggests IRS 10* is an AGB star with an accreting companion. Among the approximately 90 newly discovered sources are a probable cataclysmic variable, a potential edge-on contact 84 day period eclipsing binary, and a possible 41 day period pulsating variable., Comment: Published in Acta Astronomica. High resolution version available at http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~molly/AcA_57_173.pdf
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22. A Search for Transiting Hot Planets as Small as Neptune in the Open Cluster M37
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Hartman, J. D., Gaudi, B. S., Holman, M. J., McLeod, B. A., Stanek, K. Z., and Barranco, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We are conducting a transit survey of the open cluster M37 using the Megacam instrument on the 6.5 m Multiple-Mirror Telescope. We have obtained ~4500 images of this cluster over 18.5 nights and have achieved the precision necessary to detect planets smaller than Saturn. In this presentation we provide an overview of the project, describe the ongoing data reduction/analysis and present some of our preliminary results., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the ASP Conference Series: "Transiting Extrasolar Planets Workshop" MPIA Heidelberg Germany, 25-28 September 2006. Eds: Cristina Afonso, David Weldrake & Thomas Henning
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- 2007
23. Measured Metallicities at the Sites of Nearby Broad-Lined Type Ic Supernovae and Implications for the SN-GRB Connection
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Modjaz, M., Kewley, L., Kirshner, R. P., Stanek, K. Z., Challis, P., Garnavich, P. M., Greene, J. E., Kelly, P., and Prieto, J. L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We compare the chemical abundances at the sites of 12 nearby (z <0.14) Type Ic supernovae (SN Ic) that showed broad lines, but had no observed Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB), with the chemical abundances in 5 nearby (z < 0.25) galaxies at the sites of GRB where broad-lined SN Ic were seen after the fireball had faded. It has previously been noted that GRB hosts are low in luminosity and low in their metal abundances. If low metallicity is sufficient to force the evolution of massive stars to end their lives as GRB with an accompanying broad-lined SN Ic, then we would expect higher metal abundances for the broad-lined SN Ic that have no detected GRB. This is what we observe, and this trend is independent of the choice of metallicity calibration we adopt, and the mode of SN survey that found the broad-lined SN. A unique feature of this analysis is that we present new spectra of the host galaxies and analyze all the measurements of both samples in the same set of ways, using the galaxy emission-line measurements corrected for extinction and stellar absorption, via independent metallicity diagnostics of Kewley & Dopita (2002), of McGaugh (1991) and of Pettini & Pagel (2004). In our small sample, the boundary between galaxies that have GRB accompanying their broad-lined SN Ic and those that have broad-lined SN Ic without a GRB lies at an oxygen abundance of 12+log(O/H)_KD02 ~ 8.5, which corresponds to 0.2-0.6 Z_sun depending on the adopted metallicity scale and solar abundance value. Even when we limit the comparison to SN Ic that were found in untargeted supernova surveys, the environment of every broad-lined SN Ic that had no GRB is more metal rich than the site of any broad-lined SN Ic where a GRB was detected., Comment: accepted by the Astronomical Journal, 18 pages, emulate-apj, v2 contains more data than v1; conclusions strengthened, SN selection & metalliciy diagnostic effects addressed; high-resolution figures at http://astro.berkeley.edu/~mmodjaz/Metallicity_Modjaz-HighResFigs/
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24. Strongly Variable z=1.48 FeII and MgII Absorption in the Spectra of z=4.05 GRB 060206
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Hao, H., Stanek, K. Z., Dobrzycki, A., Matheson, T., Bentz, M. C., Kuraszkiewicz, J., Garnavich, P. M., Howk, J. C., Calkins, M. L., Worthey, G., Modjaz, M., and Serven, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the discovery of strongly variable FeII and MgII absorption lines seen at z=1.48 in the spectra of the z=4.05 GRB 060206 obtained between 4.13 to 7.63 hours (observer frame) after the burst. In particular, the FeII line equivalent width (EW) decayed rapidly from 1.72+-0.25 AA to 0.28+-0.21 AA, only to increase to 0.96+-0.21 AA in a later date spectrum. The MgII doublet shows even more complicated evolution: the weaker line of the doublet drops from 2.05+-0.25 AA to 0.92+-0.32 AA, but then more than doubles to 2.47+-0.41 AA in later data. The ratio of the EWs for the MgII doublet is also variable, being closer to 1:1 (saturated regime) when the lines are stronger and becoming closer to 2:1 (unsaturated regime) when the lines are weaker, consistent with expectations based on atomic physics. We have investigated and rejected the possibility of any instrumental or atmospheric effects causing the observed strong variations. Our discovery of clearly variable intervening FeII and MgII lines lends very strong support to their scenario, in which the characteristic size of intervening patches of MgII ``clouds'' is comparable to the GRB beam size, i.e, about 10^16 cm. We discuss various implications of this discovery, including the nature of the MgII absorbers, the physics of GRBs, and measurements of chemical abundances from GRB and quasar absorption lines., Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; ApJ Letters, accepted
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25. The Nature of the Variable Galactic Center Source GCIRS 16SW Revisited: A Massive Eclipsing Binary
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Peeples, Molly S., Bonanos, A. Z., DePoy, D. L., Stanek, K. Z., Pepper, J., Pogge, Richard W., Pinsonneault, M. H., and Sellgren, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a re-analysis of our H- and K-band photometry and light-curves for GCIRS 16SW, a regular periodic source near the Galactic center. These data include those presented by DePoy et al. (2004); we correct a sign error in their reduction, finding GCIRS 16SW to be an eclipsing binary with no color variations. We find the system to be an equal mass overcontact binary (both stars overfilling their Roche lobes) in a circular orbit with a period P=19.4513 days, an inclination angle i=71 degrees. This confirms and strengthens the findings of Martins et al. (2006) that GCIRS 16SW is an eclipsing binary composed of two ~50Msun stars, further supporting evidence of recent star formation very close to the Galactic center. Finally, the calculated luminosity of each component is close to the Eddington luminosity, implying that the temperature of 24400 K given by Najarro et al. (1997) might be overestimated for these evolved stars., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJL; v2 includes a figure showing lack of H-K color variation
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26. HAT-P-1b: A Large-Radius, Low-Density Exoplanet Transiting one Member of a Stellar Binary
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Bakos, G. A., Noyes, R. W., Kovacs, G., Latham, D. W., Sasselov, D. D., Torres, G., Fischer, D. A., Stefanik, R. P., Sato, B., Johnson, J. A., Pal, A., Marcy, G. W., Butler, R. P., Esquerdo, G. A., Stanek, K. Z., Lazar, J., Papp, I., Sari, P., and Sipocz, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using small automated telescopes in Arizona and Hawaii, the HATNet project has detected an object transiting one member of the double star system ADS 16402 AB. This system is a pair of G0 main-sequence stars with age about 3 Gyr at a distance of ~139 pc and projected separation of ~1550 AU. The transit signal has a period of 4.46529 days and depth of 0.015 mag. From follow-up photometry and spectroscopy, we find that the object is a "hot Jupiter" planet with mass about 0.53 M_jup and radius ~1.36 R_jup traveling in an orbit with semimajor axis 0.055 AU and inclination about 85.9 deg, thus transiting the star at impact parameter 0.74 of the stellar radius. Based on a data set spanning three years, ephemerides for the transit center are: T_C = 2453984.397 + N_tr * 4.46529. The planet, designated HAT-P-1b, appears to be at least as large in radius, and smaller in mean density, than any previously-known planet., Comment: 8 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ, see also http://www.hatnet.hu (www.hatnet.hu)
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27. Optical and X-Ray Observations of GRB 060526: A Complex Afterglow Consistent with An Achromatic Jet Break
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Dai, X., Halpern, J. P., Morgan, N. D., Armstrong, E., Mirabal, N., Haislip, J. B., Reichart, D. E., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We obtained 98 R-band and 18 B, r', i' images of the optical afterglow of GRB 060526 (z=3.21) with the MDM 1.3m, 2.4m, and the PROMPT telescopes in Cerro Tololo over the 5 nights following the burst trigger. Combining these data with other optical observations reported in GCN and the Swift-XRT observations, we compare the optical and X-ray afterglow light curves of GRB 060526. Both the optical and X-ray afterglow light curves show rich features, such as flares and breaks. The densely sampled optical observations provide very good coverage at T>1.e4 sec. We observed a break at 2.4e5 sec in the optical afterglow light curve. Compared with the X-ray afterglow light curve, the break is consistent with an achromatic break supporting the beaming models of GRBs. However, the pre-break and post-break temporal decay slopes are difficult to explain in simple afterglow models. We estimated a jet angle of \theta_j ~ 7 degrees and a prompt emission size of R_{prompt} ~ 2e14 cm. In addition, we detected several optical flares with amplitudes of \Delta m ~ 0.2, 0.6, and 0.2 mag. The X-ray afterglows detected by Swift have shown complicated decay patterns. Recently, many well-sampled optical afterglows also show decays with flares and multiple breaks. GRB 060526 provides an additional case of such a complex, well observed optical afterglow. The accumulated well-sampled afterglows indicate that most of the optical afterglows are complex., Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 21 pages, 4 figures
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28. A new Cepheid distance to the maser-host galaxy NGC 4258 and its implications for the Hubble Constant
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Macri, L. M., Stanek, K. Z., Bersier, D., Greenhill, L., and Reid, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present initial results from a time-series BVI survey of two fields in NGC 4258 using the Advanced Camera for Surveys onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. This galaxy was selected because of its accurate maser-based distance, which is anticipated to have a total uncertainty of ~3%. The goal of the HST observations is to provide an absolute calibration of the Cepheid Distance Scale and to measure its dependence on chemical abundance (the so-called "metallicity effect"). We carried out observations of two fields at different galactocentric distances with a mean abundance difference of 0.5 dex. We discovered a total of 281 Cepheids with periods ranging from 4 to 45 days (the duration of our observing window). We determine a Cepheid distance modulus for NGC 4258 (relative to the LMC) of 10.88 +- 0.04 (random) +- 0.05 (systematic) mag. Given the published maser distance to the galaxy, this implies \mu (LMC)=18.41 +- 0.10 (r) +- 0.13 (s) mag or D(LMC)= 48.1 +- 2.3 (r) +- 2.9 (s) kpc. We measure a metallicity effect of \gamma=-0.29 +- 0.09 (r) +- 0.05 (s) mag/dex. We see no evidence for a variation in the slope of the Period-Luminosity relation as a function of abundance. We estimate a Hubble Constant of H_0= 74 +- 3 (r) +- 6 (s) km/s Mpc using a recent sample of 4 well-observed type Ia SNe and our new calibration of the Cepheid Distance Scale. It may soon be possible to measure the value of H_0 with a total uncertainty of 5%, with consequent improvement in the determination of the equation of state of dark energy., Comment: 39 pages, 24 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Full-resolution version available in PS and PDF formats at http://www.noao.edu/staff/lmacri/0608211-full.ps.gz and http://www.noao.edu/staff/lmacri/0608211-full.pdf
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29. The First DIRECT Distance Determination to a Detached Eclipsing Binary in M33
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Bonanos, A. Z., Stanek, K. Z., Kudritzki, R. P., Macri, L. M., Sasselov, D. D., Kaluzny, J., Stetson, P. B., Bersier, D., Bresolin, F., Matheson, T., Mochejska, B. J., Przybilla, N., Szentgyorgyi, A. H., Tonry, J., and Torres, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first direct distance determination to a detached eclipsing binary in M33, which was found by the DIRECT Project. Located in the OB 66 association at coordinates (alpha, delta)=(01:33:46.17,+30:44:39.9) for J2000.0, it was one of the most suitable detached eclipsing binaries found by DIRECT for distance determination, given its apparent magnitude and orbital period. We obtained follow-up BV time series photometry, JHKs photometry and optical spectroscopy from which we determined the parameters of the system. It contains two O7 main sequence stars with masses of 33.4+/-3.5 Mo and 30.0+/-3.3 Mo and radii of 12.3+/-0.4 Ro and 8.8+/-0.3 Ro, respectively. We derive temperatures of 37000+/-1500 K and 35600+/-1500 K. Using BVRJHKs photometry for the flux calibration, we obtain a distance modulus of 24.92+/-0.12 mag (964+/-54 kpc), which is ~0.3 mag longer than the Key Project distance to M33. We discuss the implications of our result and the importance of establishing M33 as an independent rung on the cosmological distance ladder., Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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30. Protecting Life in the Milky Way: Metals Keep the GRBs Away
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Stanek, K. Z., Gnedin, O. Y., Beacom, J. F., Gould, A. P., Johnson, J. A., Kollmeier, J. A., Modjaz, M., Pinsonneault, M. H., Pogge, R., and Weinberg, D. H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The host galaxies of the five local, z<0.25, long-duration gamma-ray bursts, each of which had a well-documented associated supernova, are all faint and metal-poor compared to the population of local star-forming galaxies. We quantify this statement by using a previous analysis of star-forming galaxies (z<0.2) from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to estimate the fraction of local star formation as a function of host galaxy oxygen abundance. We find that only a small fraction (<25%) of current star formation occurs in galaxies with oxygen abundance 12+log(O/H)<8.6, i.e., about half that of the Milky Way. However, all five low-z GRB hosts have oxygen abundance below this limit, in three cases very significantly so. If GRBs traced local star formation independent of metallicity, the probability of obtaining such low abundances for all five hosts would be P~0.1%. We conclude that GRBs trace only low-metallicity star formation, and that the Milky Way has been too metal rich to host long GRBs for at least the last several billion years. This result has implications for the potential role of GRBs in mass extinctions, for searches for recent burst remnants in the Milky Way and other large galaxies, for non-detections of late radio emission from local core-collapse supernovae, and for the production of cosmic rays in the local Universe. We also find that the isotropic energy release of these five GRBs, E_iso, steeply decreases with increasing host oxygen abundance, suggesting an upper metallicity limit for ``cosmological'' GRBs at ~0.15 Z_solar. (Abridged), Comment: To be published in Acta Astronomica. 16 pages, 3 figures; several small changes
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- 2006
31. Deep CFHT Photometric Survey of the Entire M33 Galaxy I: Catalogue of 36000 Variable Point Sources
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Hartman, J. D., Bersier, D., Stanek, K. Z., Beaulieu, J. -P., Kaluzny, J., Marquette, J. -B., and Stetson, P. B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have conducted a variability survey of the local group galaxy M33 using g', r', and i' observations from 27 nights spanning 17 months made with the MegaPrime/MegaCam instrument on the 3.6 m CFHT telescope. We identify more than 36000 variable sources with g',r',i' < 24 out of approximately 2 million point sources in a one square degree field of view. This increases the number of known variables in this galaxy by more than a factor of 20. In this paper we provide a brief description of the data and a general overview of the variable star population which includes more than 800 candidate variable blue and red supergiant stars, more than 2000 Cepheids, and more than 19000 long period variable AGB and RGB stars., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 20 pages, 16 figures. Catalogue and light curves are available at http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/~dfb/M33/ animations associated with this paper are available at http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~jhartman/M33_Movie.html a version of the paper with full-resolution images is available at http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/~dfb/M33/M33_fullres.ps.gz
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- 2006
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32. Early-Time Photometry and Spectroscopy of the Fast Evolving SN 2006AJ Associated with GRB 060218
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Modjaz, M., Stanek, K. Z., Garnavich, P. M., Berlind, P., Blondin, S., Brown, W., Calkins, M., Challis, P., Diamond-Stanic, A. M., Hao, H., Hicken, M., Kirshner, R. P., and Prieto, J. L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present early photometric and spectroscopic data on the afterglow of GRB 060218 and report the evolution of the underlying supernova 2006aj. Our data span a time-range of 4 days to 22 days after the GRB and clearly establish that SN 2006aj is a fast-evolving broad-lined Type Ic SN with an extremely short rise-time (~ 10 days) and a large optical luminosity (M_V = -18.7 mag). The SN properties are deduced well since the GRB afterglow does not contribute a significant amount to the total light output. The spectra show broad lines indicative of large expansion velocities, but are better matched by those of SN 2002ap and SN 1997ef (that are not associated with a GRB) than those of the proto-typical GRB-related SN 1998bw. We refine the redshift estimate to z = 0.0335 +/- 0.00007. The host-galaxy is a low-metallicity dwarf galaxy (with M_V \~ -16.0 mag), similar to host-galaxies of other GRB-associated SNe., Comment: 7 pages using emulateapj, 3 figures, accepted by ApJL, minor changes compared to v1
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- 2006
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33. Microlens OGLE-2005-BLG-169 Implies Cool Neptune-Like Planets are Common
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Gould, A., Udalski, A., An, D., Bennett, D. P., Zhou, A. -Y., Dong, S., Rattenbury, N. J., Gaudi, B. S., Yock, P. C. M., Bond, I. A., Christie, G. W., Horne, K., Anderson, J., Stanek, K. Z., DePoy, D. L., Han, C., McCormick, J., Park, B. -G., Pogge, R. W., Poindexter, S. D., Soszynski, I., Szymanski, M. K., Kubiak, M., Pietrzynski, G., Szewczyk, O., Wyrzykowski, L., Ulaczyk, K., Paczynski, B., Bramich, D. M., Snodgrass, C., Steele, I. A., Burgdorf, M. J., Bode, M. F., Botzler, C. S., Mao, S., and Swaving, S. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We detect a Neptune mass-ratio (q~8e-5) planetary companion to the lens star in the extremely high-magnification (A~800) microlensing event OGLE-2005-BLG-169. If the parent is a main-sequence star, it has mass M~0.5 M_sun implying a planet mass of ~13 M_earth and projected separation of ~2.7 AU. When intensely monitored over their peak, high-magnification events similar to OGLE-2005-BLG-169 have nearly complete sensitivity to Neptune mass-ratio planets with projected separations of 0.6 to 1.6 Einstein radii, corresponding to 1.6--4.3 AU in the present case. Only two other such events were monitored well enough to detect Neptunes, and so this detection by itself suggests that Neptune mass-ratio planets are common. Moreover, another Neptune was recently discovered at a similar distance from its parent star in a low-magnification event, which are more common but are individually much less sensitive to planets. Combining the two detections yields 90% upper and lower frequency limits f=0.37^{+0.30}_{-0.21} over just 0.4 decades of planet-star separation. In particular, f>16% at 90% confidence. The parent star hosts no Jupiter-mass companions with projected separations within a factor 5 of that of the detected planet. The lens-source relative proper motion is \mu~7--10 mas/yr, implying that if the lens is sufficiently bright, I<23.8, it will be detectable by HST by 3 years after peak. This would permit a more precise estimate of the lens mass and distance, and so the mass and projected separation of the planet. Analogs of OGLE-2005-BLG-169Lb orbiting nearby stars would be difficult to detect by other methods of planet detection, including radial velocities, transits, or astrometry., Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters, 9 text pages + 4 figures + 1 table
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34. 'Anomalous' Optical GRB Afterglows are Common: Two z~4 Bursts, GRB 060206 and 060210
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Stanek, K. Z., Dai, X., Prieto, J. L., An, D., Garnavich, P. M., Calkins, M. L., Serven, J., Worthey, G., Hao, H., Dobrzycki, A., Howk, C., and Matheson, T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on two recent z~4 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), GRB 060206 and GRB 060210, for which we have obtained well-sampled optical light curves. Our data, combined with early optical data reported in the literature, shows unusual behavior for both afterglows. In R-band GRB 060206 (z=4.045) experienced a slow early decay, followed by a rapid increase in brightness by factor ~2.5 about 1 hour after the burst. Its afterglow then faded in a broken power-law fashion, with a smooth break at t_b=0.6 days, but with additional, less dramatic (~10%) ``bumps and wiggles'', well detected in the densely sampled light curve. The R-band afterglow of GRB 060210 (z=3.91) is also unusual: the light curves was more or less flat between 60 and 300 sec after the burst, followed by ~70% increase at ~600 sec after the burst, after which the light curve declined as a t^{-1.3} power-law. Despite earlier reports to the contrary, we find that for GRB 060206 X-rays also more or less follow the optical decay, but with significant variations on short timescales. However, the X-ray afterglow is contaminated by a nearby, variable source, which especially at late times obscures the behavior of the X-ray afterglow. We argue that ``anomalous'' optical afterglows are likely to be the norm, and that the rapid variations often seen in Swift-XRT data would also be seen in the optical light curves, given good enough sampling. As a result, some of the often employed procedures, such as deriving the jet opening angle using a smooth broken power-law fit to the optical light curves, in many cases might have a poor statistical significance. We argue that the early increase in brighness for both bursts might be due to the turn-on of the external shock. Existence of such features could provide valuable additional information about the burst. (Abridged), Comment: ApJ Letters, in press, 17 pages, 4 figures, 2 photometry tables, full XRT light curves discussed
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- 2006
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35. Planets in Stellar Clusters Extensive Search. IV. A detection of a possible transiting planet candidate in the open cluster NGC 2158
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Mochejska, B. J., Stanek, K. Z., Sasselov, D. D., Szentgyorgyi, A. H., Adams, E., Cooper, R. L., Foster, J. B., Hartman, J. D., Hickox, R. C., Lai, K., Westover, M., and Winn, J. N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have undertaken a long-term project, Planets in Stellar Clusters Extensive Search (PISCES), to search for transiting planets in open clusters. In this paper we present the results for NGC 2158, an intermediate age, populous cluster. We have monitored the cluster for over 260 hours, spread over 59 nights. We have detected one candidate transiting low luminosity object, with eclipse depth of 3.7% in the R-band. If the host star is a member of the cluster, the eclipse depth is consistent with a 1.7 R_J object. Cluster membership of the host is supported by its location on the cluster main sequence (MS) and its close proximity to the cluster center (2'). We have discovered two other stars exhibiting low-amplitude (4-5%) transits, V64 and V70, but they are most likely blends or field stars. Given the photometric precision and temporal coverage of our observations, and current best estimates for the frequency and radii of short-period planets, the expected number of detectable transiting planets in our sample is 0.13. We have observed four outbursts for the candidate cataclysmic variable V57. We have discovered 40 new variable stars in the cluster, bringing the total number of identified variables to 97, and present for them high precision light curves, spanning 13 months., Comment: 21 pages LaTeX, including 14 figures and 7 tables. To be published in the February 2006 Astronomical Journal. Paper with better resolution figures available at ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/bmochejs/PISCES/papers/4_N2158/ms.ps.gz
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- 2005
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36. A Simple Method To Find All Lensed Quasars
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Kochanek, C. S., Mochejska, B., Morgan, N. D., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We demonstrate that gravitationally lensed quasars are easily recognized using image subtraction methods as time variable sources that are spatially extended. For Galactic latitudes |b|>20 deg, lensed quasars dominate the population of spatially extended variable sources, although there is some contamination from variable star pairs, variable star-quasar pairs and binary quasars that can be easily controlled using other information in the survey such as the object light curves and colors. This will allow planned large-scale synoptic surveys to find lensed quasars almost down to their detection limits without the need for extensive follow-up observations., Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJL
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- 2005
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37. Binaries Like to be Twins: Implications for Doubly Degenerate Binaries, the Supernova Ia Rate and Other Interacting Binaries
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Pinsonneault, M. H. and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The recent sample of 21 detached eclipsing binaries in the Small Magellanic Cloud (Harries et al. 2003, Hilditch et al. 2005) provides a valuable test of the binary mass function for massive stars. We show that 50% of detached binaries have companions with very similar masses, q=M_2/M_1 > 0.87, where M_1, M_2 denote the masses of the two binary components, M_1 > M_2. A Salpeter relative mass function for the secondary is very strongly excluded, and the data is consistent with a flat mass function containing 55% of the systems and a ``twin'' population with q>0.95 containing the remainder. We also survey the vast existing literature discussing the mass ratio in binaries and conclude that a significant twin population (of more than 20-25%) exists in binaries that are likely to interact across a broad range of stellar masses and metallicity. Interactions involving nearly equal mass stars have distinctly different properties than those involving stars of unequal mass; the secondaries will tend to be evolved and the common envelope evolution is qualitatively different. The implications of such a population for both binary interactions and star formation are substantial, and we present some examples. We argue that twin systems may provide a natural stellar population to explain the recently proposed prompt channel for type Ia SN, and the presence of a twin population dramatically reduces the maximum inferred NS+BH merger rate relative to the NS+NS merger rate. Twins may also be important for understanding the tendency of WD and NS binaries to be nearly equal in mass, and inclusion of twins in population studies will boost the blue straggler production rate., Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, ApJL, submitted
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- 2005
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38. The Hypervelocity Star SDSS J090745.0+024507 is a Short-Period Variable
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Fuentes, Cesar I., Stanek, K. Z., Gaudi, B. Scott, McLeod, Brian A., Bogdanov, Slavko B., Hartman, Joel D., Hickox, Ryan C., and Holman, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-precision photometry of the hypervelocity star SDSS J090745.0+024507 (HVS), which has a Galactic rest-frame radial velocity of v=709 km/s, and so has likely been ejected from the supermassive black hole in the Galactic center. Our data were obtained on two nights using the MMT 6.5m telescope, and is supplemented by lower precision photometry obtained on four nights using the FLWO 1.2m telescope. The high-precision photometry indicates that the HVS is a short-period, low-amplitude variable, with period P=0.2-2 days and amplitude A = 2-10%. Together with the known effective temperature of T_eff ~ 10,500 K (spectral type B9), this variability implies that the HVS is a member of the class of slowly pulsating B-type main sequence stars, thus resolving the previously-reported two-fold degeneracy in the luminosity and distance of the star. The HVS has a heliocentric distance of 71 kpc, and an age of ~0.35 Gyr. The time of ejection from the center of the Galaxy is < 100 Myr, and thus the existence of the OS constitutes observational evidence of a population of young stars in the proximity of the central supermassive black hole ~0.1 Gyr ago. It is possible that the HVS was a member of a binary that was tidally disrupted by the central black hole; we discuss constraints on the properties of the companion's orbit., Comment: ApJL, submitted, 4 pages, 4 figures
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- 2005
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39. Discovery of nine quasars behind the Large Magellanic Cloud
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Dobrzycki, A., Eyer, L., Stanek, K. Z., and Macri, L. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of nine quasars behind the Large Magellanic Cloud, with emission redshifts ranging from 0.07 to 2.0. Six of them were identified as part of the systematic variability-based search for QSOs in the objects from the OGLE-II database. Combination of variability-based selection of candidates with the candidates' colours appears to be a powerful technique for identifying quasars, potentially reaching ca. 50% efficiency. We report an apparent correlation between variability magnitude and variability timescale, which - if confirmed - could put even more constraints on QSO candidate selection. The remaining three quasars were identified via followup spectroscopy of optical counterparts to X-ray sources found serendipitously by the Chandra X-ray Observatory satellite. Even though the locations of the candidates were quite uniformly distributed over the LMC bar, the confirmed QSOs all appear near the bar's outskirts., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2005
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40. The Transit Light Curve Project. IV. Five Transits of the Exoplanet OGLE-TR-10b
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Holman, Matthew J., Winn, Joshua N., Fuentes, Cesar I., Hartman, Joel D., Stanek, K. Z., Torres, Guillermo, Sasselov, Dimitar D., Gaudi, B. Scott, Jones, R. Lynne, and Fraser, Wesley
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present I and B photometry of five distinct transits of the exoplanet OGLE-TR-10b. By modeling the light curves, we find the planetary radius to be R_P = 1.06 +/- 0.08 R_Jup and the stellar radius to be R_S = 1.10 +/- 0.07 R_sun. The uncertainties are dominated by statistical errors in the photometry. Our estimate of the planetary radius is smaller than previous estimates that were based on lower-precision photometry, and hence the planet is not as anomalously large as was previously thought. We provide updated determinations of all the system parameters, including the transit ephemerides., Comment: Accepted in the Astrophysical Journal, 23 October 2006. Includes observations of additional transits to confirm earlier results. [15 pg, 6 figs]
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- 2005
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41. Pushing the Limits of Ground-Based Photometric Precision -- Sub-Millimagnitude Time-Series Photometry of the Open Cluster NGC 6791
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Hartman, J. D., Stanek, K. Z., Gaudi, B. S., Holman, M. J., and McLeod, B. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results from a three night, time-series study of the open cluster NGC 6791 using the Megacam wide-field mosaic CCD camera on the 6.5m MMT telescope. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the ability to obtain very high precision photometry for a large number of stars. We achieved better than 1% precision for more than 8000 stars with 14.3 < R < 20.1 and sub-millimagnitude (as low as 0.36 mmag) precision for over 300 stars with 14.6 < R < 16.3 in the field of this cluster. We also discovered 8 new variable stars, including a possible delta-Scuti variable with an amplitude of 2%, 6 likely W UMa contact binaries, and a possible RS CVn star, and we identified 5 suspected low-amplitude variables, including one star with an amplitude of 3 mmag. We comment on the implications of this study for a ground-based survey for transiting planets as small as Neptune., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Submitted to the AJ
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- 2005
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42. Deep Photometry of GRB 041006 Afterglow: Hypernova Bump at Redshift z=0.716
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Stanek, K. Z., Garnavich, P. M., Nutzman, P. A., Hartman, J. D., Garg, A., Adelberger, K., Berlind, P., Bonanos, A. Z., Calkins, M. L., Challis, P., Gaudi, B. S., Holman, M. J., Kirshner, R. P., McLeod, B. A., Osip, D., Reiprich, T. Pimenova T. H., Romanishin, W., Spahr, T., Tegler, S. C., and Zhao, X.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present deep optical photometry of the afterglow of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 041006 and its associated hypernova obtained over 65 days after detection (55 R-band epochs on 10 different nights). Our early data (t<4 days) joined with published GCN data indicates a steepening decay, approaching F_nu ~t^{-0.6} at early times (<<1 day) and F_nu ~t^{-1.3} at late times. The break at t_b=0.16+-0.04 days is the earliest reported jet break among all GRB afterglows. During our first night, we obtained 39 exposures spanning 2.15 hours from 0.62 to 0.71 days after the burst that reveal a smooth afterglow, with an rms deviation of 0.024 mag from the local power-law fit, consistent with photometric errors. After t~4 days, the decay slows considerably, and the light curve remains approximately flat at R~24 mag for a month before decaying by another magnitude to reach R~25 mag two months after the burst. This ``bump'' is well-fitted by a k-corrected light curve of SN1998bw, but only if stretched by a factor of 1.38 in time. In comparison with the other GRB-related SNe bumps, GRB 041006 stakes out new parameter space for GRB/SNe, with a very bright and significantly stretched late-time SN light curve. Within a small sample of fairly well observed GRB/SN bumps, we see a hint of a possible correlation between their peak luminosity and their ``stretch factor'', broadly similar to the well-studied Phillips relation for the type Ia supernovae., Comment: ApJ Letters, accepted. Additional material available at ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/kstanek/GRB041006/
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- 2005
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43. Planets in Stellar Clusters Extensive Search. III. A search for transiting planets in the metal-rich open cluster NGC 6791
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Mochejska, B. J., Stanek, K. Z., Sasselov, D. D., Szentgyorgyi, A. H., Bakos, G. A., Devor, J., Hradecky, V., Marrone, D. P., Winn, J. N., and Zaldarriaga, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have undertaken a long-term project, Planets in Stellar Clusters Extensive Search (PISCES), to search for transiting planets in open clusters. In this paper we present the results for NGC 6791 -- a very old, populous, metal rich cluster. We have monitored the cluster for over 300 hours, spread over 84 nights. We have not detected any good transiting planet candidates. Given the photometric precision and temporal coverage of our observations, and current best estimates for the frequency and radii of short-period planets, the expected number of detectable transiting planets in our sample is 1.5. We have discovered 14 new variable stars in the cluster, most of which are eclipsing binaries, and present high precision light curves, spanning two years, for these new variables and also the previously known variables., Comment: 18 pages LaTeX, including 11 figures and 6 tables. Limb darkening included in the computation of the planet detection efficiency. Version with full resolution figures available through ftp at ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/bmochejs/PISCES/papers/3_N6791/
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- 2005
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44. Gamma-Ray Bursts in the SALT/Swift Era: GRB/SN Connection
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Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
I discuss the Gamma Ray Burst research in the era of SALT and Swift, concentrating on the GRB/SN connection., Comment: Invited talk at the First International Workshop on ``Stellar Astrophysics with the World Largest Telescopes'', Torun, Poland, 7-10 September 2004. 12 pages, 6 figures. See http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/cfa/oir/Research/GRB/ for related materials
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- 2004
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45. BVI Photometric Variability Survey of M3
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Hartman, J. D., Kaluzny, J., Szentgyorgyi, A., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have conducted a three band (BVI) variability survey of the globular cluster M3. This is the first three band survey of the cluster using modern image subtraction techniques. Observations were made over 9 nights in 1998 on the 1.2m telescope at the F.L. Whipple Observatory in Arizona. We present photometry for 180 variable stars in the M3 field, of which 12 are newly discovered. New discoveries include six SX Phe type variables which all lie in the blue straggler region of the color magnitude diagram, two new first overtone RR Lyrae, a candidate multi-mode RR Lyrae, a detached eclipsing binary, and two unclassified variables. We also provide revised periods for 52 of the 168 previously known variables that we observe. The catalog and photometry for the variable stars are available via anonymous ftp at ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/kstanek/M3/, Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures. Movies associated with this paper at http://www-cfa.harvard.edu/~jhartman/M3_movies.html Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. This replacement contains a few minor revisions
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- 2004
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46. HAT Variability Survey in the High Stellar Density 'Kepler Field' with Millimagnitude Image Subtraction Photometry
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Hartman, J. D., Bakos, G., Stanek, K. Z., and Noyes, R. W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Hungarian-made Automated Telescope network (HATnet) is an ongoing project to detect transiting extra-solar planets using small aperture (11 cm diameter), robotic telescopes. In this paper we present the results from using image subtraction photometry to reduce a crowded stellar field observed with one of the HATnet telescopes (HAT-5). This field was chosen to overlap with the planned Kepler mission. We obtained I-band light curves for 98,000 objects in a 8.3x8.3 square degree field of view, near the Galactic plane in the constellations Cygnus and Lyra. These observations include 788 5-minute exposures over 30 days. For the brightest stars (I~8.0) we achieved a precision of 3.5 millimagnitudes, falling to 0.1 magnitudes at the faint end (I~14). From these light curves we identify 1617 variable stars, of which 1439 are newly discovered. The fact that nearly 90% of the variables were previously undetected further demonstrates the vast number of variables yet to be discovered even among fairly bright stars in our Galaxy. We also discuss some of the most interesting cases. These include: V1171 Cyg, a triple system with the inner two stars in P=1.462 day period eclipsing orbit and the outer star a P=4.86 day Cepheid; HD227269, an eccentric eclipsing system with a P=4.86 day period that also shows P=2.907 day pulsations; WW Cyg, a well studied eclipsing binary; V482 Cyg, an RCB star; and V546 Cyg, a PV Tel Variable. We also detect a number of small amplitude variables, in some cases with full amplitude as low as 10 mmag., Comment: 44 pages, 19 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. Revised version, including updated matches to existing catalogs. Data available at http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~gbakos/HAT/LC/199/
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- 2004
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47. WR 20a is an Eclipsing Binary: Accurate Determination of Parameters for an Extremely Massive Wolf-Rayet System
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Bonanos, A. Z., Stanek, K. Z., Udalski, A., Wyrzykowski, L., Zebrun, K., Kubiak, M., Szymanski, M. K., Szewczyk, O., Pietrzynski, G., and Soszynski, I.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a high-precision I-band light curve for the Wolf-Rayet binary WR 20a, obtained as a sub-project of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment. Rauw et al. have recently presented spectroscopy for this system, strongly suggesting extremely large minimum masses of 70.7 +/- 4.0 Mo and 68.8 +/- 3.8 Mo for the component stars of the system, with the exact values depending strongly on the period of the system. We detect deep eclipses of about 0.4 mag in the light curve of WR 20a, confirming and refining the suspected period of P=3.686 days and deriving an inclination angle of i=74.5 +/- 2 deg. Using these photometric data and the radial velocity data of Rauw et al., we derive the masses for the two components of WR 20a to be 83.0 +/- 5.0 Mo and 82.0 +/- 5.0 Mo. Therefore, WR 20a is confirmed to consist of two extremely massive stars and to be the most massive binary known with an accurate mass determination., Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJL
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- 2004
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48. GRB 021211 as a Faint Analogue of GRB 990123: Exploring the Similarities and Differences in their Optical Afterglows
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Holland, Stephen T., Bersier, David, Bloom, J. S., Garnavich, Peter G., Caldwell, Nelson, Challis, Peter, Kirshner, Robert, Luhman, Kevin, McLeod, Brian, and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present B, V, Rc, J, H, and Ks photometry of the optical afterglow of the gamma-ray burst GRB 021211 taken at the Magellan, MMT, and WIYN observatories between 0.7 and 50 days after the burst. We find an intrinsic spectral slope at optical and near-infrared wavelengths of 0.69 +/- 0.14 at 0.87 days. The optical decay during the first day is almost identical to that of GRB 990123 except that GRB 021211's optical afterglow was intrinsically approximately 38 times fainter, and the transition from the reverse shock to the forward shock may have occurred earlier than it did for GRB 990123. We find no evidence for a jet break or the cooling break passing through optical frequencies during the first day after the burst. There is weak evidence for a break in the J-band decay between 0.89 and 1.87 days which may be due to a jet. The optical and infrared data are consistent with a relativistic fireball where the shocked electrons are in the slow cooling regime and the electron index is 2.3 +/- 0.1. The forward shock appears to have been expanding in a homogeneous ambient medium during the first day after the burst. Our analysis suggests that the jet of GRB 021211 may have a small opening angle and that the total gamma-ray energy is likely to be much less than the canonical value of 1.33E+51 erg. If this is the case then it is possible that most of the energy of the burst is in another form such as a frozen magnetic field, supernova ejecta, or a second jet component. The host galaxy of GRB 021211 is subluminous and has a star formation rate of at least one Solar mass per year., Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures, LaTex using AASTeX v5.2, to the Nov 2004 Astronomical Journal. Some minor changes have been made to the paper in accordance with the referee's report
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- 2004
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49. Using Local Group Galaxies to Investigate the Influence of Blending on Cepheid Distances and the Cosmological Distance Scale
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Mochejska, B. J., Macri, L. M., Sasselov, D. D., and Stanek, K. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the influence of blending on the Cepheid distance scale using two Local Group galaxies, M31 and M33. Blending leads to systematically low distances to galaxies observed with the HST, and therefore to systematically high estimates of H_0. High-resolution HST images are compared to our ground-based data, obtained as part of the DIRECT project, for a sample of 22 Cepheids in M31 and 102 Cepheids in M33. For a sample of 22 Cepheids in M31, the average (median) flux contribution from luminous companions not resolved on the ground-based images in the V-band, S_V, is about 19% (12%) of the flux of the Cepheid. For 102 Cepheids in M33 the average (median) values of S_V, S_I, S_B are 23% (13%), 28% (20%), 28% (15%). For 64 Cepheids in M33 with periods in excess of 10 days the average (median) S_V, S_I, S_B are 16% (7%), 23% (12%), 20% (10%)., Comment: 4 pages LaTeX, including 2 figures and 1 table, to appear in Proceedings of IAU Colloquium 193, Variable Stars in the Local Group, July 2003, Christchurch, New Zealand
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- 2004
50. Planets in Stellar Clusters Extensive Search. II. Discovery of 57 Variables in the Cluster NGC 2158 with Millimagnitude Image Subtraction Photometry
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Mochejska, B. J., Stanek, K. Z., Sasselov, D. D., Szentgyorgyi, A. H., Westover, M., and Winn, J. N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have undertaken a long-term project, Planets in Stellar Clusters Extensive Search (PISCES), to search for transiting planets in open clusters. NGC 2158 is one of the targets we have chosen -- an intermediate age, populous, rather metal poor cluster. In this paper we present the results of a search for variable stars in the data from the first season of monitoring at the FLWO 1.2 m telescope. This is the first variability search ever conducted in this cluster. We present a catalog of 57 variable stars, most with low amplitude variability. Among the variables is a cataclysmic variable (CV) which underwent a 2.5 mag outburst. If it is a member of NGC 2158, this would be the fourth CV known in an open cluster. We have also found five delta Scuti stars, three of which we have two or more detectable modes of pulsation. Of the 57 variables discovered, 28 have R-band amplitudes of 5% or below. Six of those vary at or below the 2% level, including one with 0.08% variability., Comment: 13 pages LaTeX, including 8 figures and 4 tables, submitted to Astronomical Journal. Version with full resolution figures available through ftp at ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/bmochejs/PISCES/papers/2_N2158/
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- 2004
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