327 results on '"Pont, Frédéric"'
Search Results
2. Single-cell spatial explorer: easy exploration of spatial and multimodal transcriptomics
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Pont, Frédéric, Cerapio, Juan Pablo, Gravelle, Pauline, Ligat, Laetitia, Valle, Carine, Sarot, Emeline, Perrier, Marion, Lopez, Frédéric, Laurent, Camille, Fournié, Jean Jacques, and Tosolini, Marie
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- 2023
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3. The proteome and transcriptome of stress granules and P bodies during human T lymphocyte activation
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Curdy, Nicolas, Lanvin, Olivia, Cerapio, Juan-Pablo, Pont, Fréderic, Tosolini, Marie, Sarot, Emeline, Valle, Carine, Saint-Laurent, Nathalie, Lhuillier, Emeline, Laurent, Camille, Fournié, Jean-Jacques, and Franchini, Don-Marc
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- 2023
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4. A New Saharan Strain of Streptomyces sp. GSB-11 Produces Maculosin and N-acetyltyramine Active Against Multidrug-Resistant Pathogenic Bacteria
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Driche, El Hadj, Badji, Boubekeur, Bijani, Christian, Belghit, Saïd, Pont, Frédéric, Mathieu, Florence, and Zitouni, Abdelghani
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- 2022
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5. A continuum from clear to cloudy hot-Jupiter exoplanets without primordial water depletion
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Sing, David K., Fortney, Jonathan J., Nikolov, Nikolay, Wakeford, Hannah R., Kataria, Tiffany, Evans, Thomas M., Aigrain, Suzanne, Ballester, Gilda E., Burrows, Adam S., Deming, Drake, Désert, Jean-Michel, Gibson, Neale P., Henry, Gregory W., Huitson, Catherine M., Knutson, Heather A., Etangs, Alain Lecavelier des, Pont, Frederic, Showman, Adam P., Vidal-Madjar, Alfred, Williamson, Michael H., and Wilson, Paul A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Thousands of transiting exoplanets have been discovered, but spectral analysis of their atmospheres has so far been dominated by a small number of exoplanets and data spanning relatively narrow wavelength ranges (such as 1.1 to 1.7 {\mu}m). Recent studies show that some hot-Jupiter exoplanets have much weaker water absorption features in their near-infrared spectra than predicted. The low amplitude of water signatures could be explained by very low water abundances, which may be a sign that water was depleted in the protoplanetary disk at the planet's formation location, but it is unclear whether this level of depletion can actually occur. Alternatively, these weak signals could be the result of obscuration by clouds or hazes, as found in some optical spectra. Here we report results from a comparative study of ten hot Jupiters covering the wavelength range 0.3-5 micrometres, which allows us to resolve both the optical scattering and infrared molecular absorption spectroscopically. Our results reveal a diverse group of hot Jupiters that exhibit a continuum from clear to cloudy atmospheres. We find that the difference between the planetary radius measured at optical and infrared wavelengths is an effective metric for distinguishing different atmosphere types. The difference correlates with the spectral strength of water, so that strong water absorption lines are seen in clear-atmosphere planets and the weakest features are associated with clouds and hazes. This result strongly suggests that primordial water depletion during formation is unlikely and that clouds and hazes are the cause of weaker spectral signatures., Comment: This is the authors version of the manuscript, 18 pages including Methods. Published in Nature, available at http://nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/nature16068 spectra also available at http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/sing/David_Sing/Spectra.html
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- 2015
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6. Cytidine deaminase resolves replicative stress and protects pancreatic cancer from DNA-targeting drugs
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Lumeau, Audrey, primary, Bery, Nicolas, additional, Frances, Audrey, additional, Gayral, Marion, additional, Labrousse, Guillaume, additional, Ribeyre, Cyril, additional, Lopez, Charlène, additional, Nevot, Adèle, additional, El Kaoutari, Abdessamad, additional, Hanoun, Naima, additional, Sarot, Emeline, additional, Perrier, Marion, additional, Pont, Frédéric, additional, Cerapio, Juan Pablo, additional, Fournié, Jean-Jacques, additional, Lopez, Frédéric, additional, Madrid-Mencia, Miguel, additional, Pancaldi, Vera, additional, Pillaire, Marie-Jeanne, additional, Bergoglio, Valérie, additional, Torrisani, Jerome, additional, Dusetti, Nelson, additional, Hoffmann, Jean-Sébastien, additional, Buscail, Louis, additional, Lutzmann, Malik, additional, and Cordelier, Pierre, additional
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- 2024
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7. Single-cell RNA sequencing unveils the shared and the distinct cytotoxic hallmarks of human TCRVδ1 and TCRVδ2 γδ T lymphocytes
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Pizzolato, Gabriele, Kaminski, Hannah, Tosolini, Marie, Franchini, Don-Marc, Pont, Fréderic, Martins, Fréderic, Valle, Carine, Labourdette, Delphine, Cadot, Sarah, Quillet-Mary, Anne, Poupot, Mary, Laurent, Camille, Ysebaert, Loic, Meraviglia, Serena, Dieli, Francesco, Merville, Pierre, Milpied, Pierre, Déchanet-Merville, Julie, and Fournié, Jean-Jacques
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- 2019
8. Simulation of Gene Regulatory Networks
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Ycart, Bernard, Pont, Frédéric, and Fournié, Jean-Jacques
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Quantitative Biology - Molecular Networks ,Mathematics - Probability ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
This limited review is intended as an introduction to the fast growing subject of mathematical modelling of cell metabolism and its biochemical pathways, and more precisely on pathways linked to apoptosis of cancerous cells. Some basic mathematical models of chemical kinetics, with emphasis on stochastic models, are presented.
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- 2013
9. The Deep Blue Color of HD189733b: Albedo Measurements with Hubble Space Telescope/Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph at Visible Wavelengths
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Evans, Thomas M., Pont, Frédéric, Sing, David K., Aigrain, Suzanne, Barstow, Joanna K., Désert, Jean-Michel, Gibson, Neale, Heng, Kevin, Knutson, Heather A., and Etangs, Alain Lecavelier des
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a secondary eclipse observation for the hot Jupiter HD189733b across the wavelength range 290-570nm made using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope. We measure geometric albedos of Ag = 0.40 \pm 0.12 across 290-450nm and Ag < 0.12 across 450-570nm at 1-sigma confidence. The albedo decrease toward longer wavelengths is also apparent when using six wavelength bins over the same wavelength range. This can be interpreted as evidence for optically thick reflective clouds on the dayside hemisphere with sodium absorption suppressing the scattered light signal beyond ~450nm. Our best-fit albedo values imply that HD189733b would appear a deep blue color at visible wavelengths., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
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- 2013
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10. Statistical data mining for symbol associations in genomic databases
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Ycart, Bernard, Pont, Frédéric, and Fournié, Jean-Jacques
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Quantitative Biology - Genomics ,Quantitative Biology - Molecular Networks ,97R50 - Abstract
A methodology is proposed to automatically detect significant symbol associations in genomic databases. A new statistical test is proposed to assess the significance of a group of symbols when found in several genesets of a given database. Applied to symbol pairs, the thresholded p-values of the test define a graph structure on the set of symbols. The cliques of that graph are significant symbol associations, linked to a set of genesets where they can be found. The method can be applied to any database, and is illustrated MSigDB C2 database. Many of the symbol associations detected in C2 or in non-specific selections did correspond to already known interactions. On more specific selections of C2, many previously unkown symbol associations have been detected. These associations unveal new candidates for gene or protein interactions, needing further investigation for biological evidence.
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- 2013
11. Circumstellar disks and planets. Science cases for next-generation optical/infrared long-baseline interferometers
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Wolf, Sebastian, Malbet, Fabien, Alexander, Richard, Berger, Jean-Philippe, Creech-Eakman, Michelle, Duchene, Gaspard, Dutrey, Anne, Mordasini, Christophe, Pantin, Eric, Pont, Frederic, Pott, Joerg-Uwe, Tatulli, Eric, and Testi, Leonardo
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a review of the interplay between the evolution of circumstellar disks and the formation of planets, both from the perspective of theoretical models and dedicated observations. Based on this, we identify and discuss fundamental questions concerning the formation and evolution of circumstellar disks and planets which can be addressed in the near future with optical and infrared long-baseline interferometers. Furthermore, the importance of complementary observations with long-baseline (sub)millimeter interferometers and high-sensitivity infrared observatories is outlined., Comment: 83 pages; Accepted for publication in "Astronomy and Astrophysics Review"; The final publication is available at http://www.springerlink.com
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- 2012
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12. Observational constraints on tidal effects using orbital eccentricities
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Husnoo, Nawal, Pont, Frédéric, Mazeh, Tsevi, Fabrycky, Daniel, Hébrard, Guillaume, Bouchy, François, and Shporer, Avi
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We have analysed radial velocity measurements for known transiting exoplanets to study the empirical signature of tidal orbital evolution for close-in planets. Compared to standard eccentricity determination, our approach is modified to focus on the rejection of the null hypothesis of a circular orbit. We are using a MCMC analysis of radial velocity measurements and photometric constraints, including a component of correlated noise, as well as Bayesian model selection to check if the data justifies the additional complexity of an eccentric orbit. We find that among planets with non-zero eccentricity values quoted in the literature, there is no evidence for an eccentricity detection for the 7 planets CoRoT-5b, WASP-5b, WASP-6b, WASP-10b, WASP-12b, WASP-17b, and WASP-18b. In contrast, we confirm the eccentricity of HAT-P-16b, e=0.034\pm0.003, the smallest eccentricity that is reliably measured so far for an exoplanet as well as that of WASP-14b, which is the planet at the shortest period (P=2.24 d), with a confirmed eccentricity, e= 0.088\pm0.003. As part of the study, we present new radial velocity data using the HARPS spectrograph for CoRoT-1, CoRoT-3, WASP-2, WASP-4, WASP-5 and WASP-7 as well as the SOPHIE spectrograph for HAT-P-4, HAT-P-7, TrES-2 and XO-2. We show that the dissipative effect of tides raised in the planet by the star and vice-versa explain all the eccentricity and spin-orbit alignment measurements available for transiting planets. We revisit the mass-period relation (Mazeh et al. 2005, Pont 2011) and consider its relation to the stopping mechanism of orbital migration for hot Jupiters. In addition to CoRoT-2 and HD 189733 (Pont 2009), we find evidence for excess rotation of the star in the systems CoRoT-18, HAT-P-20, WASP-19 and WASP-43., Comment: 31 pages, 17 figures. Accepted by MNRAS (Feb 2012)
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- 2012
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13. Temperature-Pressure Profile of the hot Jupiter HD 189733b from HST Sodium Observations: Detection of Upper Atmospheric Heating
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Huitson, Catherine M., Sing, David K., Vidal-Madjar, Alfred, Ballester, Gilda E., Etangs, Alain Lecavelier des, Désert, Jean-Michel, and Pont, Frédéric
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present transmission spectra of the hot Jupiter HD 189733b taken with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph aboard HST. The spectra cover the wavelength range 5808-6380 Ang with a resolving power of R=5000. We detect absorption from the NaI doublet within the exoplanet's atmosphere at the 9 sigma confidence level within a 5 Ang band (absorption depth 0.09 +/- 0.01%) and use the data to measure the doublet's spectral absorption profile. We detect only the narrow cores of the doublet. The narrowness of the feature could be due to an obscuring high-altitude haze of an unknown composition or a significantly sub-solar NaI abundance hiding the line wings beneath a H2 Rayleigh signature. We compare the spectral absorption profile over 5.5 scale heights with model spectral absorption profiles and constrain the temperature at different atmospheric regions, allowing us to construct a vertical temperature profile. We identify two temperature regimes; a 1280 +/- 240 K region derived from the NaI doublet line wings corresponding to altitudes below ~ 500 km, and a 2800 +/- 400 K region derived from the NaI doublet line cores corresponding to altitudes from ~ 500-4000 km. The zero altitude is defined by the white-light radius of Rp/Rstar=0.15628 +/- 0.00009. The temperature rises with altitude, which is likely evidence of a thermosphere. The absolute pressure scale depends on the species responsible for the Rayleigh signature and its abundance. We discuss a plausible scenario for this species, a high-altitude silicate haze, and the atmospheric temperature-pressure profile that results. In this case, the high altitude temperature rise for HD 189733b occurs at pressures of 10^-5 to 10^-8 bar.
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- 2012
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14. The Effects of Irradiation on Hot Jovian Atmospheres: Heat Redistribution and Energy Dissipation
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Perna, Rosalba, Heng, Kevin, and Pont, Frederic
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Hot Jupiters, due to the proximity to their parent stars, are subjected to a strong irradiating flux which governs their radiative and dynamical properties. We compute a suite of 3D circulation models with dual-band radiative transfer, exploring a relevant range of irradiation temperatures, both with and without temperature inversions. We find that, for irradiation temperatures T \lesssim 2000 K, heat redistribution is very efficient, producing comparable day- and night-side fluxes. For Tirr \approx 2200-2400 K, the redistribution starts to break down, resulting in a high day-night flux contrast. Our simulations indicate that the efficiency of redistribution is primarily governed by the ratio of advective to radiative timescales. Models with temperature inversions display a higher day-night contrast due to the deposition of starlight at higher altitudes, but we find this opacity-driven effect to be secondary compared to the effects of irradiation. The hotspot offset from the substellar point is large when insolation is weak and redistribution is efficient, and decreases as redistribution breaks down. The atmospheric flow can be potentially subjected to the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (as indicated by the Richardson number) only in the uppermost layers, with a depth that penetrates down to pressures of a few millibars at most. Shocks penetrate deeper, down to several bars in the hottest model. Ohmic dissipation generally occurs down to deeper levels than shock dissipation (to tens of bars), but the penetration depth varies with the atmospheric opacity. The total dissipated Ohmic power increases steeply with the strength of the irradiating flux and the dissipation depth recedes into the atmosphere, favoring radius inflation in the most irradiated objects., Comment: Revised version, accepted to ApJ
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- 2012
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15. Spitzer Infrared Observations and Independent Validation of the Transiting Super-Earth CoRoT-7b
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Fressin, Francois, Torres, Guillermo, Pont, Frederic, Knutson, Heather A., Charbonneau, David, Mazeh, Tsevi, Aigrain, Suzanne, Fridlund, Malcolm, Henze, Christopher E., Guillot, Tristan, and Rauer, Heike
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The detection and characterization of the first transiting super-Earth, CoRoT-7 b, has required an unprecedented effort in terms of telescope time and analysis. Although the star does display a radial velocity signal at the period of the planet, this has been difficult to disentangle from the intrinsic stellar variability, and pinning down the velocity amplitude has been very challenging. As a result, the precise value of the mass of the planet - and even the extent to which it can be considered to be confirmed - have been debated in the recent literature, with six mass measurements published so far based on the same spectroscopic observations, ranging from about 2 to 8 Earth masses. Here we report on an independent validation of the planet discovery, using one of the fundamental properties of a transit signal: its achromaticity. We observed four transits of CoRoT-7 b with Spitzer, in order to determine whether the depth of the transit signal in the near-infrared is consistent with that observed in the CoRoT bandpass, as expected for a planet. We detected the transit and found an average depth of 0.426 {\pm} 0.115 mmag at 4.5 {\mu}m, which is in good agreement with the depth of 0.350 {\pm} 0.011 mmag found by CoRoT. These observations place important constraints on the kinds of astrophysical false positives that could mimic the signal. Combining this with additional constraints reported earlier, we performed an exhaustive exploration of possible blends scenarios for CoRoT-7 b using the BLENDER technique. We are able to rule out the vast majority of false positives, and the remaining ones are found to be much less likely than a true transiting planet. We thus validate CoRoT-7 b as a bona-fide planet with a very high degree of confidence, independently of any radial-velocity information. Our Spitzer observations have additionally allowed us to significantly improve the ephemeris of the planet., Comment: Accepted by ApJ
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- 2011
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16. On the effects of clouds and hazes in the atmospheres of hot Jupiters: semi-analytical temperature-pressure profiles
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Heng, Kevin, Hayek, Wolfgang, Pont, Frédéric, and Sing, David K.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
Motivated by the work of Guillot (2010), we present a semi-analytical formalism for calculating the temperature-pressure profiles in hot Jovian atmospheres which includes the effects of clouds/hazes and collision-induced absorption. Using the dual-band approximation, we assume that stellar irradiation and thermal emission from the hot Jupiter occur at distinct wavelengths ("shortwave" versus "longwave"). For a purely absorbing cloud/haze, we demonstrate its dual effect of cooling and warming the upper and lower atmosphere, respectively, which modifies, in a non-trivial manner, the condition for whether a temperature inversion is present in the upper atmosphere. The warming effect becomes more pronounced as the cloud/haze deck resides at greater depths. If it sits below the shortwave photosphere, the warming effect becomes either more subdued or ceases altogether. If shortwave scattering is present, its dual effect is to warm and cool the upper and lower atmosphere, respectively, thus counteracting the effects of enhanced longwave absorption by the cloud/haze. We make a tentative comparison of a 4-parameter model to the temperature-pressure data points inferred from the observations of HD 189733b and estimate that its Bond albedo is approximately 10%. Besides their utility in developing physical intuition, our semi-analytical models are a guide for the parameter space exploration of hot Jovian atmospheres via three-dimensional simulations of atmospheric circulation., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 18 pages, 8 figures. No changes made from last version
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- 2011
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17. Determining Eccentricities of Transiting Planets: A Divide in the Mass-Period Plane
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Pont, Frederic, Husnoo, Nawal, Mazeh, Tsevi, and Fabrycky, Daniel
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The two dominant features in the distribution of orbital parameters for close-in exoplanets are the prevalence of circular orbits for very short periods, and the observation that planets on closer orbits tend to be heavier. The first feature is interpreted as a signature of tidal evolution, while the origin of the second, a "mass-period relation" for hot Jupiters, is not understood. In this paper we re-consider the ensemble properties of transiting exoplanets with well-measured parameters, focussing on orbital eccentricity and the mass-period relation. We recalculate the constraints on eccentricity in a homogeneous way, using new radial-velocity data, with particular attention to statistical biases. We find that planets on circular orbits gather in a well-defined region of the mass-period plane, close to the minimum period for any given mass. Exceptions to this pattern reported in the Literature can be attributed to statistical biases. The ensemble data is compatible with classical tide theory with orbital circularisation caused by tides raised on the planet, and suggest that tidal circularisation and the stopping mechanisms for close-in planets are closely related to each other. The position mass-period relation is compatible with a relation between a planet's Hill radius and its present orbit., Comment: 8 pages, to be published in MNRAS
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- 2011
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18. A new look at NICMOS transmission spectroscopy: no conclusive evidence for molecular features
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Gibson, Neale P., Pont, Frederic, and Aigrain, Suzanne
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a re-analysis of archival HST/NICMOS transmission spectroscopy of the exoplanet system, HD 189733, from which detections of several molecules have been claimed. As expected, we can replicate the transmission spectrum previously published when we use an identical model for the systematic effects, although the uncertainties are larger as we use a residual permutation algorithm in an effort to account for instrumental systematics. We also find that the transmission spectrum is considerably altered when slightly changing the instrument model, and conclude that the NICMOS transmission spectrum is too dependent on the method used to remove systematics to be considered a robust detection of molecular species, given that there is no physical reason to believe that the baseline flux should be modelled as a linear function of any chosen set of parameters., Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 276 The Astrophysics of Planetary Systems: Formation, Structure, and Dynamical Evolution. Eds A. Sozzetti, Mario G. Lattanzi and A.P. Boss
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- 2010
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19. A new look at NICMOS transmission spectroscopy of HD189733, GJ-436 and XO-1: no conclusive evidence for molecular features
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Gibson, Neale P., Pont, Frederic, and Aigrain, Suzanne
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a re-analysis of archival HST/NICMOS transmission spectroscopy of three exoplanet systems; HD 189733, GJ-436 and XO-1. Detections of several molecules, including H20, CH4 and CO2, have been claimed for HD 189733 and XO-1, but similarly sized features are attributed to systematic noise for GJ-436. The data consist of time-series grism spectra covering a planetary transit. After extracting light curves in independent wavelength channels, we use a linear decorrelation technique account for instrumental systematics (which is becoming standard in the field), and measure the planet-to-star radius ratio as a function of wavelength. For HD 189733, the uncertainties in the transmission spectrum are significantly larger than those previously reported. We also find the transmission spectrum is considerably altered when using different out-of-transit orbits to remove the systematics, when some parameters are left out of the decorrelation procedure, or when we perform the decorrelation with quadratic functions rather than linear functions. Given that there is no physical reason to believe the baseline flux should be modelled as a linear function of any particular set of parameters, we interpret this as evidence that the linear decorrelation technique is not a robust method to remove systematic effects from the light curves for each wavelength channel. For XO-1, the parameters measured to decorrelate the light curves would require extrapolation to the in-transit orbit to remove the systematics, and we cannot reproduce the previously reported results. We conclude that the resulting NICMOS transmission spectra are too dependent on the method used to remove systematics to be considered robust detections of molecular species in planetary atmospheres, although the presence of these molecules is not ruled out., Comment: 17 pages, 28 figures, accepted in MNRAS
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- 2010
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20. SOPHIE velocimetry of Kepler transit candidates. I. Detection of the low-mass white dwarf KOI-74b
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Ehrenreich, David, Lagrange, Anne-Marie, Bouchy, François, Perrier, Christian, Hébrard, Guillaume, Boisse, Isabelle, Bonfils, Xavier, Arnold, Luc, Delfosse, Xavier, Desort, Morgan, Díaz, Rodrigo F., Eggenberger, Anne, Forveille, Thierry, Lovis, Christophe, Moutou, Claire, Pepe, Francesco, Pont, Frédéric, Santos, Nuno C., Santerne, Alexandre, Ségransan, Damien, Udry, Stéphane, and Vidal-Madjar, Alfred
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kepler mission has detected transits and occultations of a hot compact object around an early-type star, the Kepler Object of Interest KOI 74. The mass of this transiting object was photometrically assessed in a previous study using the presence of the relativistic beaming effect (so-called `Doppler boosting') in the light curve. Our aim was to provide a spectroscopic validation of this pioneering approach. We measured the radial velocity variations of the A1V star KOI 74 with the SOPHIE spectrograph at the 1.93-m telescope of the Observatoire de Haute-Provence (France). Radial velocity measurements of this star are challenging because of the high level of stellar pulsations and the few available spectral lines. Using a technique dedicated to early-type main-sequence stars, we measured radial velocity variations compatible with a companion of mass 0.252+/-0.025 Msun, in good agreement with the value derived from the Kepler light curve. This work strengthens the scenario suggesting that KOI 74 is a blue straggler orbited by a stellar core despoiled of its envelope, the low-mass white dwarf KOI 74b., Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. Accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Radii of KOI 74 and KOI 81 updated in Fig. 6 (thanks to J. Carter for pointing that out)
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- 2010
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21. Re-assessing the radial-velocity evidence for planets around CoRoT-7
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Pont, Frederic, Aigrain, Suzanne, and Zucker, Shay
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
CoRoT-7 is an 11th magnitude K-star whose light curve shows transits with depth of 0.3 mmag and a period of 0.854 d, superimposed on variability at the 1% level, due to the modulation of evolving active regions with the star's 23 d rotation period. In this paper, we revisit the published HARPS radial velocity measurements of the object, which were previously used to estimate the companion mass, but have been the subject of ongoing debate. We build a realistic model of the star's activity during the HARPS observations, by fitting simultaneously the line width and the line bisector, and use it to evaluate the contribution of activity to the RV variations. The data show clear evidence of errors above the level of the formal uncertainties, which are accounted for either by activity, nor by any plausible planet model, and which increase rapidly with decreasing signal-to-noise of the spectra. We cite evidence of similar systematics in mid-SNR spectra of other targets obtained with HARPS and other high-precision RV spectrographs, and discuss possible sources. Allowing for these, we re-evaluate the semi-amplitude of the CoRoT-7b signal, finding Kb=1.6 +-1.3 m/s, a tentative detection with a much reduced significance (1.2-sigma) compared to previous estimates. We also argue that the combined presence of activity and additional errors preclude a meaningful search for additional low-mass companions, despite previous claims to the contrary. Our analysis points to a lower density for CoRoT-7b, the 1-sigma mass range spanning 1-4 MEarth, allowing for a wide range of bulk compositions. In particular, an ice-rich composition is compatible with the RV constraints. This study highlights the importance of a realistic treatment of both activity and uncertainties, particularly in the medium signal-to-noise ratio regime, which applies to most small planet candidates from CoRoT and Kepler., Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS, revised version with minor modifications and one additional figure
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- 2010
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22. The Earth as an extrasolar transiting planet: Earth's atmospheric composition and thickness revealed by Lunar eclipse observations
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Vidal-Madjar, Alfred, Arnold, Luc, Ehrenreich, David, Ferlet, Roger, Etangs, Alain Lecavelier des, Bouchy, François, Segransan, Damien, Boisse, Isabelle, Hébrard, Guillaume, Moutou, Claire, Désert, Jean-Michel, Sing, David K., Cabanac, Rémy, Nitschelm, Christian, Bonfils, Xavier, Delfosse, Xavier, Desort, Morgan, Díaz, Rodrigo F., Eggenberger, Anne, Forveille, Thierry, Lagrange, Anne-Marie, Lovis, Christophe, Pepe, Francesco, Perrier, Christian, Pont, Frédéric, Santos, Nuno C., and Udry, Stéphane
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
An important goal within the quest for detecting an Earth-like extrasolar planet, will be to identify atmospheric gaseous bio-signatures. Observations of the light transmitted through the Earth's atmosphere, as for an extrasolar planet, will be the first step for future comparisons. We have completed observations of the Earth during a Lunar eclipse, a unique situation similar to that of a transiting planet. We aim at showing what species could be detected in its atmosphere at optical wavelengths, where a lot of photons are available in the masked stellar light. We present observations of the 2008 August 16 Moon eclipse performed with the SOPHIE spectrograph at the Observatoire de Haute-Provence. Locating the spectrograph fibers in the penumbra of the eclipse, the Moon irradiance is then a mix of direct, unabsorbed Sun light and solar light that has passed through the Earth's limb. This mixture essentially reproduces what is recorded during the transit of an extrasolar planet. We report here the clear detection of several Earth atmospheric compounds in the transmission spectra, such as ozone, molecular oxygen, and neutral sodium as well as molecular nitrogen and oxygen through the Rayleigh signature. Moreover, we present a method that allows us to derive the thickness of the atmosphere versus the wavelength for penumbra eclipse observations. We quantitatively evaluate the altitude at which the atmosphere becomes transparent for important species like molecular oxygen and ozone, two species thought to be tightly linked to the presence of life. The molecular detections presented here are an encouraging first attempt, necessary to better prepare for the future of extremely-large telescopes and transiting Earth-like planets. Instruments like SOPHIE will be mandatory when characterizing the atmospheres of transiting Earth-like planets from the ground and searching for bio-marker signatures., Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2010
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23. Orbital eccentricity of WASP-12 and WASP-14 from new radial-velocity monitoring with SOPHIE
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Husnoo, Nawal, Pont, Frederic, Hebrard, Guillaume, Simpson, Elaine, Mazeh, Tsevi, Bouchy, Francois, Moutou, Claire, Arnold, Luc, Boisse, Isabelle, Diaz, Rodrigo, Eggenberger, Anne, and Shporer, Avi
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
As part of the long-term radial velocity monitoring of known transiting planets -- designed to measure orbital eccentricities, spin-orbit alignments and further planetary companions -- we have acquired radial velocity data for the two transiting systems WASP-12 and WASP-14, each harbouring gas giants on close orbits (orbital period of 1.09 and 2.24 days respectively). In both cases, the initial orbital solution suggested a significant orbital eccentricity, 0.049+-0.015 for WASP-12 and 0.091+-0.003 for WASP-14. Since then, measurements of the secondary eclipse of WASP-12 in the infrared have indicated that one projection of the eccentricity (e cos w) was very close to zero, casting doubt on the eccentricity from the initial radial velocity orbit. Our measurements confirm that the initial eccentricity detection could be spurious, and show that the radial velocity data is compatible with a circular orbit. A MCMC analysis taking into account the presence of correlated systematic noise in both the radial velocity and photometric data gives e=0.017 (+0.015-0.011). By contrast, we confirm the orbital eccentricity of WASP-14, and refine its value to e=0.088+-0.003. WASP-14 is thus the closest presently known planet with a confirmed eccentric orbit., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to MNRAS.
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- 2010
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24. The thermal emission of the exoplanets WASP-1b and WASP-2b
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Wheatley, Peter J., Cameron, Andrew Collier, Harrington, Joseph, Fortney, Jonathan J., Simpson, James M., Anderson, David R., Smith, Alexis M. S., Aigrain, Suzanne, Clarkson, William I., Gillon, Michael, Haswell, Carole A., Hebb, Leslie, Hébrard, Guillaume, Hellier, Coel, Hodgkin, Simon T., Horne, Keith D., Kane, Stephen R., Maxted, Pierre F. L., Norton, Andrew J., Pollacco, Don L., Pont, Frederic, Skillen, Ian, Smalley, Barry, Street, Rachel A., Udry, Stephane, West, Richard G., and Wilson, David M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a comparative study of the thermal emission of the transiting exoplanets WASP-1b and WASP-2b using the Spitzer Space Telescope. The two planets have very similar masses but suffer different levels of irradiation and are predicted to fall either side of a sharp transition between planets with and without hot stratospheres. WASP-1b is one of the most highly irradiated planets studied to date. We measure planet/star contrast ratios in all four of the IRAC bands for both planets (3.6-8.0um), and our results indicate the presence of a strong temperature inversion in the atmosphere of WASP-1b, particularly apparent at 8um, and no inversion in WASP-2b. In both cases the measured eclipse depths favor models in which incident energy is not redistributed efficiently from the day side to the night side of the planet. We fit the Spitzer light curves simultaneously with the best available radial velocity curves and transit photometry in order to provide updated measurements of system parameters. We do not find significant eccentricity in the orbit of either planet, suggesting that the inflated radius of WASP-1b is unlikely to be the result of tidal heating. Finally, by plotting ratios of secondary eclipse depths at 8um and 4.5um against irradiation for all available planets, we find evidence for a sharp transition in the emission spectra of hot Jupiters at an irradiation level of 2 x 10^9 erg/s/cm^2. We suggest this transition may be due to the presence of TiO in the upper atmospheres of the most strongly irradiated hot Jupiters., Comment: 10 pages, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2010
25. ASTEP South: An Antarctic Search for Transiting ExoPlanets around the celestial South pole
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Crouzet, Nicolas, Guillot, Tristan, Agabi, Karim, Rivet, Jean-Pierre, Bondoux, Erick, Challita, Zalpha, Fanteï-Caujolle, Yan, Fressin, François, Mékarnia, Djamel, Schmider, François-Xavier, Valbousquet, Franck, Blazit, Alain, Bonhomme, Serge, Abe, Lyu, Daban, Jean-Baptiste, Gouvret, Carole, Fruth, Thomas, Rauer, Heike, Erikson, Anders, Barbieri, Mauro, Aigrain, Suzanne, and Pont, Frédéric
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
ASTEP South is the first phase of the ASTEP project (Antarctic Search for Transiting ExoPlanets). The instrument is a fixed 10 cm refractor with a 4kx4k CCD camera in a thermalized box, pointing continuously a 3.88 degree x 3.88 degree field of view centered on the celestial South pole. ASTEP South became fully functional in June 2008 and obtained 1592 hours of data during the 2008 Antarctic winter. The data are of good quality but the analysis has to account for changes in the point spread function due to rapid ground seeing variations and instrumental effects. The pointing direction is stable within 10 arcseconds on a daily timescale and drifts by only 34 arcseconds in 50 days. A truly continuous photometry of bright stars is possible in June (the noon sky background peaks at a magnitude R=15 arcsec-2 on June 22), but becomes challenging in July (the noon sky background magnitude is R=12.5 arcsec?2 on July 20). The weather conditions are estimated from the number of stars detected in the field. For the 2008 winter, the statistics are between 56.3 % and 68.4 % of excellent weather, 17.9 % to 30 % of veiled weather and 13.7 % of bad weather. Using these results in a probabilistic analysis of transit detection, we show that the detection efficiency of transiting exoplanets in one given field is improved at Dome C compared to a temperate site such as La Silla. For example we estimate that a year-long campaign of 10 cm refractor could reach an efficiency of 69 % at Dome C versus 45 % at La Silla for detecting 2-day period giant planets around target stars from magnitude 10 to 15. This shows the high potential of Dome C for photometry and future planet discoveries. [Short abstract]
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- 2009
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26. Empirical evidence for tidal evolution in transiting planetary systems
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Pont, Frederic
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Most transiting planets orbit very close to their parent star, causing strong tidal forces between the two bodies. Tidal interaction can modify the dynamics of the system through orbital alignment, circularisation, synchronisation, and orbital decay by exchange of angular moment. Evidence for tidal circularisation in close-in giant planet is well-known. Here we review the evidence for excess rotation of the parent stars due to the pull of tidal forces towards spin-orbit synchronisation. We find suggestive empirical evidence for such a process in the present sample of transiting planetary systems. The corresponding angular momentum exchange would imply that some planets have spiralled towards their star by substantial amounts since the dissipation of the protoplanetary disc. We suggest that this could quantitatively account for the observed mass-period relation of close-in gas giants. We discuss how this scenario can be further tested and point out some consequences for theoretical studies of tidal interactions and for the detection and confirmation of transiting planets from radial-velocity and photometric surveys., Comment: 10 pages, MNRAS, in Press
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- 2008
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27. Star-Planet Interactions
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Shkolnik, Evgenya, Aigrain, Suzanne, Cranmer, Steven, Fares, Rim, Fridlund, Malcolm, Pont, Frederic, Schmitt, Juergen, Smith, Alexis, and Suzuki, Takeru
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Much effort has been invested in recent years, both observationally and theoretically, to understand the interacting processes taking place in planetary systems consisting of a hot Jupiter orbiting its star within 10 stellar radii. Several independent studies have converged on the same scenario: that a short-period planet can induce activity on the photosphere and upper atmosphere of its host star. The growing body of evidence for such magnetic star-planet interactions includes a diverse array of photometric, spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric studies. The nature of which is modeled to be strongly affected by both the stellar and planetary magnetic fields, possibly influencing the magnetic activity of both bodies, as well as affecting irradiation and non-thermal and dynamical processes. Tidal interactions are responsible for the circularization of the planet orbit, for the synchronization of the planet rotation with the orbital period, and may also synchronize the outer convective envelope of the star with the planet. Studying such star-planet interactions (SPI) aids our understanding of the formation, migration and evolution of hot Jupiters., Comment: 8 pages, proceedings of Cool Stars 15, St. Andrews, July 2008, to be published in the Conference Proceedings Series of the American Institute of Physics - "Star-planet interactions" splinter session summary
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- 2008
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28. HAT-P-9b: A Low Density Planet Transiting a Moderately Faint F star
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Shporer, Avi, Bakos, Gaspar A., Bouchy, Francois, Pont, Frederic, Kovacs, Geza, Latham, Dave W., Sipocz, Brigitta, Torres, Guillermo, Mazeh, Tsevi, Esquerdo, Gilbert A., Pal, Andras, Noyes, Robert W., Sasselov, Dimitar D., Lazar, Jozsef, Papp, Istvan, Sari, Pal, and Kovacs, Gabor
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a planet transiting a moderately faint (V=12.3 mag) late F star, with an orbital period of 3.92289 +/- 0.00004 days. From the transit light curve and radial velocity measurements we determine that the radius of the planet is R_p = 1.40 +/- 0.06 R_Jup and that the mass is M_p = 0.78 +/- 0.09 M_Jup. The density of the new planet, rho = 0.35 +/- 0.06 g cm^{-3}, fits to the low-density tail of the currently known transiting planets. We find that the center of transit is at T_c = 2454417.9077 +/- 0.0003 (HJD), and the total transit duration is 0.143 +/- 0.004 days. The host star has M_s = 1.28 +/- 0.13 M_Sun and R_s = 1.32 +/- 0.07 R_Sun., Comment: Submitted to ApJ; V2: Replaced with accepted version
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- 2008
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29. Photometric Follow-up Observations of the Transiting Neptune-Mass Planet GJ 436b
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Shporer, Avi, Mazeh, Tsevi, Pont, Frederic, Winn, Joshua N., Holman, Matthew J., Latham, David W., and Esquerdo, Gilbert A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
This paper presents multi-band photometric follow-up observations of the Neptune-mass transiting planet GJ 436b, consisting of 5 new ground-based transit light curves obtained in May 2007. Together with one already published light curve we have at hand a total of 6 light curves, spanning 29 days. The analysis of the data yields an orbital period P = 2.64386+-0.00003 days, mid-transit time T_c [HJD] =2454235.8355+-0.0001, planet mass M_p = 23.1+-0.9 M_{\earth} = 0.073+-0.003 M_{Jup}, planet radius R_p = 4.2+-0.2 R_{\earth} = 0.37+-0.01 R_{Jup} and stellar radius R_s = 0.45+-0.02 R_{\sun}. Our typical precision for the mid transit timing for each transit is about 30 seconds. We searched the data for a possible signature of a second planet in the system through transit timing variations (TTV) and variation of the impact parameter. The analysis could not rule out a small, of the order of a minute, TTV and a long-term modulation of the impact parameter, of the order of +0.2 year^{-1}., Comment: V2: Replaced with accepted version
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- 2008
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30. The Monitor project: JW 380 -- a 0.26, 0.15 Msol pre main sequence eclipsing binary in the Orion Nebula Cluster
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Irwin, Jonathan, Aigrain, Suzanne, Hodgkin, Simon, Stassun, Keivan G., Hebb, Leslie, Irwin, Mike, Moraux, Estelle, Bouvier, Jerome, Alapini, Aude, Alexander, Richard, Bramich, D. M., Holtzman, Jon, Martin, Eduardo L., McCaughrean, Mark J., Pont, Frederic, Verrier, P. E., and Osorio, Maria Rosa Zapatero
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a low-mass (0.26 +/- 0.02, 0.15 +/- 0.01 Msol) pre-main-sequence eclipsing binary with a 5.3 day orbital period. JW 380 was detected as part of a high-cadence time-resolved photometric survey (the Monitor project) using the 2.5m Isaac Newton Telescope and Wide Field Camera for a survey of a single field in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) region in V and i bands. The star is assigned a 99 per cent membership probability from proper motion measurements, and radial velocity observations indicate a systemic velocity within 1 sigma of that of the ONC. Modelling of the combined light and radial velocity curves of the system gave stellar radii of 1.19 +0.04 -0.18 Rsol and 0.90 +0.17 -0.03 Rsol for the primary and secondary, with a significant third light contribution which is also visible as a third peak in the cross-correlation functions used to derive radial velocities. The masses and radii appear to be consistent with stellar models for 2-3 Myr age from several authors, within the present observational errors. These observations probe an important region of mass-radius parameter space, where there are currently only a handful of known pre-main-sequence eclipsing binary systems with precise measurements available in the literature., Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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31. Interpreting and predicting the yield of transit surveys: Giant planets in the OGLE fields
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Fressin, Francois, Guillot, Tristan, Morello, Vincent, and Pont, Frédéric
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Transiting extrasolar planets are now discovered jointly by photometric surveys and by radial velocimetry. We want to determine whether the different data sets are compatible between themselves and with models of the evolution of extrasolar planets. We simulate directly a population of stars corresponding to the OGLE transit survey and assign them planetary companions based on radial velocimetry discoveries. We use a model of the evolution and structure of giant planets assuming a variable fraction of heavy elements. The output list of detectable planets of the simulations is compared to the real detections. We confirm that the radial velocimetry and photometric survey data sets are compatible within the statistical errors, assuming that planets with periods between 1 and 2 days are approximately 5 times less frequent than planets with periods between 2 and 5 days. We show that evolution models fitting present observational constraints predict a lack of small giant planets with large masses. We also identify distinct populations of planets: those with short periods (P < 10d) are only found in orbit around metal-rich stars with [Fe/H] > -0.07. We further confirm the relative absence of low-mass giant planets at small orbital distances., Comment: article in press in A&A, 21 pages, 18 figures
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- 2007
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32. On the potential of transit surveys in star clusters: Impact of correlated noise and radial velocity follow-up
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Aigrain, Suzanne and Pont, Frederic
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an extension of the formalism recently proposed by Pepper & Gaudi to evaluate the yield of transit surveys in homogeneous stellar systems, incorporating the impact of correlated noise on transit time-scales on the detectability of transits, and simultaneously incorporating the magnitude limits imposed by the need for radial velocity follow-up of transit candidates. New expressions are derived for the different contributions to the noise budget on transit time-scales and the least-squares detection statistic for box-shaped transits, and their behaviour as a function of stellar mass is re-examined. Correlated noise that is constant with apparent stellar magnitude implies a steep decrease in detection probability at the high mass end which, when considered jointly with the radial velocity requirements, can severely limit the potential of otherwise promising surveys in star clusters. However, we find that small-aperture, wide field surveys may detect hot Neptunes whose radial velocity signal can be measured with present-day instrumentation in very nearby (<100 pc) clusters., Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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33. Precision photometry for planetary transits
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Pont, Frederic and Moutou, Claire
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We review the state of the art in follow-up photometry for planetary transit searches. Three topics are discussed: (1) Photometric monitoring of planets discovered by radial velocity to detect possible transits (2) Follow-up photometry of candidates from photometric transit searches to weed out eclipsing binaries and false positives (3) High-precision lightcurves of known transiting planets to increase the accuracy on the planet parameters., Comment: 10 pages, to appear in the PASP proceedings of "Transiting Extrasolar Planets Workshop" MPIA Heidelberg Germany, 25th-28th September 2006. Eds: C. Afonso, D. Weldrake & T. Henning
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- 2007
34. Potential of Photometric Searches for Transiting Planets
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Pont, Frederic and Planets, the ISSI Working Group on Transiting
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Many ground-based photometric surveys are now under way, and five of them have been successful at detecting transiting exoplanets. Nevertheless, detecting transiting planets has turned out to be much more challenging than initially anticipated. Transit surveys have learnt that an overwhelming number of false positives and confusion scenarios, combined with an intermittent phase coverage and systematic residuals in the photometry, could make ground-based surveys rather inefficient in the detection of transiting planets. We have set up a working group on transiting planets to confront the experience of the different surveys and get a more complete understanding of these issues, in order to improve the observing strategies and analysis schemes for ongoing surveys, and to prepare for the coming Corot and Kepler space missions. This contribution presents the current results of our working group., Comment: 10 pages, To appear in the PASP proceedings of "Transiting Extrasolar Planets Workshop" MPIA Heidelberg Germany, 25th-28th September 2006. Eds: C. Afonso, D. Weldrake & T. Henning
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- 2006
35. The Monitor project: Searching for occultations in young open clusters
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Aigrain, Suzanne, Hodgkin, Simon, Irwin, Jonathan, Hebb, Leslie, Irwin, Mike, Favata, Fabio, Moraux, Estelle, and Pont, Frederic
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Monitor project is a photometric monitoring survey of nine young (1-200Myr) clusters in the solar neighbourhood to search for eclipses by very low mass stars and brown dwarfs and for planetary transits in the light curves of cluster members. It began in the autumn of 2004 and uses several 2 to 4m telescopes worldwide. We aim to calibrate the relation between age, mass, radius and where possible luminosity, from the K-dwarf to the planet regime, in an age range where constraints on evolutionary models are currently very scarce. Any detection of an exoplanet in one of our youngest targets (<=10Myr) would also provide important constraints on planet formation and migration timescales and their relation to proto-planetary disc lifetimes. Finally, we will use the light curves of cluster members to study rotation and flaring in low-mass pre-main sequence stars. The present paper details the motivation, science goals and observing strategy of the survey. We present a method to estimate the sensitivity and number of detections expected in each cluster, using a simple semi-analytic approach which takes into account the characteristics of the cluster and photometric observations, using (tunable) best-guess assumptions for the incidence and parameter distribution of putative companions, and we incorporate the limits imposed by radial velocity follow-up from medium and large telescopes. We use these calculations to show that the survey as a whole can be expected to detect over 100 young low and very low mass eclipsing binaries, and approx. 3 transiting planets with radial velocity signatures detectable with currently available facilities., Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, to appear in MNRAS. A PDF with full resolution figures is available from http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~suz/publi/papers/monitor_intro_accepted.pdf
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- 2006
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36. The `666' collaboration on OGLE transits: I. Accurate radius of the planets OGLE-TR-10b and OGLE-TR-56b with VLT deconvolution photometry
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Pont, Frederic, Moutou, Claire, Gillon, Michael, Udalski, Andrzej, Bouchy, Francois, Fernandes, Joao, Gieren, Wolfgang, Mayor, Michel, Mazeh, Tsevi, Minniti, Dante, Melo, Claudio, Naef, Dominique, Pietrzynski, Grzegorz, Queloz, Didier, Ruiz, Maria Teresa, Santos, Nuno, and Udry, Stephane
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Transiting planets are essential to study the structure and evolution of extra-solar planets. For that purpose, it is important to measure precisely the radius of these planets. Here we report new high-accuracy photometry of the transits of OGLE-TR-10 and OGLE-TR-56 with VLT/FORS1. One transit of each object was covered in Bessel V and R filters, and treated with the deconvolution-based photometry algorithm DECPHOT, to ensure accurate millimagnitude light curves. Together with earlier spectroscopic measurements, the data imply a radius of 1.22 +0.12-0.07 R_J for OGLE-TR-10b and 1.30 +- 0.05 R_J for OGLE-TR-56b. A re-analysis of the original OGLE photometry resolves an earlier discrepancy about the radius of OGLE-TR-10. The transit of OGLE-TR-56 is almost grazing, so that small systematics in the photometry can cause large changes in the derived radius. Our study confirms both planets as inflated hot Jupiters, with large radii comparable to that of HD 209458$b$ and at least two other recently discovered transiting gas giants., Comment: Fundamental updates compared to previous version; accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2006
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37. The effect of red noise on planetary transit detection
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Pont, Frederic, Zucker, Shay, and Queloz, Didier
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Since the discovery of short-period exoplanets a decade ago, photometric surveys have been recognized as a feasible method to detect transiting hot Jupiters. Many transit surveys are now under way, with instruments ranging from 10-cm cameras to the Hubble Space Telescope. However, the results of these surveys have been much below the expected capacity, estimated in the dozens of detections per year. One of the reasons is the presence of systematics (``red noise'') in photometric time series. In general, yield predictions assume uncorrelated noise (``white noise''). In this paper, we show that the effect of red noise on the detection threshold and the expected yields cannot be neglected in typical ground-based surveys. We develop a simple method to determine the effect of red noise on photometric planetary transit detections. This method can be applied to determine detection thresholds for transit surveys. We show that the detection threshold in the presence of systematics can be much higher than with the assumption of white noise, and obeys a different dependence on magnitude, orbital period and the parameters of the survey. Our method can also be used to estimate the significance level of a planetary transit candidate (to select promising candidates for spectroscopic follow-up). We apply our method to the OGLE planetary transit search, and show that it provides a reliable description of the actual detectionthreshold with real correlated noise. We point out in what way the presence of red noise could be at least partly responsible for the dearth of transiting planet detections from existing surveys, and examine some possible adaptations in survey planning and strategy. Finally, we estimate the photometric stability necessary to the detection of transiting ``hot Neptunes''., Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, to appear in MNRAS
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- 2006
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38. A correlation between the heavy element content of transiting extrasolar planets and the metallicity of their parent stars
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Guillot, Tristan, Santos, Nuno C., Pont, Frédéric, Iro, Nicolas, Melo, Claudio, and Ribas, Ignasi
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Nine extrasolar planets with masses between 110 and 430M are known to transit their star. The knowledge of their masses and radii allows an estimate of their composition, but uncertainties on equations of state, opacities and possible missing energy sources imply that only inaccurate constraints can be derived when considering each planet separately. Aims: We seek to better understand the composition of transiting extrasolar planets by considering them as an ensemble, and by comparing the obtained planetary properties to that of the parent stars. Methods: We use evolution models and constraints on the stellar ages to derive the mass of heavy elements present in the planets. Possible additional energy sources like tidal dissipation due to an inclined orbit or to downward kinetic energy transport are considered. Results: We show that the nine transiting planets discovered so far belong to a quite homogeneous ensemble that is characterized by a mass of heavy elements that is a relatively steep function of the stellar metallicity, from less than 20 earth masses of heavy elements around solar composition stars, to up to 100M for three times the solar metallicity (the precise values being model-dependant). The correlation is still to be ascertained however. Statistical tests imply a worst-case 1/3 probability of a false positive. Conclusions: Together with the observed lack of giant planets in close orbits around metal-poor stars, these results appear to imply that heavy elements play a key role in the formation of close-in giant planets. The large masses of heavy elements inferred for planets orbiting metal rich stars was not anticipated by planet formation models and shows the need for alternative theories including migration and subsequent collection of planetesimals., Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics 0 (2006) in press
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- 2006
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39. Photometric searches for transiting planets: results and challenges
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Pont, Frederic
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Ground-based photometric surveys have led to the discovery of six transiting exoplanets, five of which were detected by the OGLE survey. The FLAMES multi-object spectrograph on the VLT has permitted a very efficient follow-up of the OGLE transit candidates, characterising not only the 5 planets but also more than 50 systems producing similar photometric signatures -- mainly eclipsing binaires. The presence of these ubiquitous "impostors" is a challenge for transit surveys. Another difficulty is the presence of red noise in the photometry, which implies a much lower sensitivity to transiting planets than usually assumed. We outline a method to estimate how the red noise will affect the expected yield of photometric transit searches., Comment: 12 pages. To appear in the proceedings of the meeting "Tenth anniversary of 51Peg b - status and prospects of hot Jupiter studies" at OHP, France, 22-26 August 2005
- Published
- 2005
40. ELODIE metallicity-biased search for transiting Hot Jupiters II. A very hot Jupiter transiting the bright K star HD189733
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Bouchy, Francois, Udry, Stephane, Mayor, Michel, Moutou, Claire, Pont, Frederic, Iribarne, Nicolas, Da Silva, Ronaldo, Ilovaisky, Sergio, Queloz, Didier, Santos, Nuno, Segransan, Damien, and Zucker, Shay
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Among the 160 known exoplanets, mainly detected in large radial-velocity surveys, only 8 have a characterization of their actual mass and radius thanks to the two complementary methods of detection: radial velocities and photometric transit. We started in March 2004 an exoplanet-search programme biased toward high-metallicity stars which are more frequently host extra-solar planets. This survey aims to detect close-in giant planets, which are most likely to transit their host star. For this programme, high-precision radial velocities are measured with the ELODIE fiber-fed spectrograph on the 1.93-m telescope, and high-precision photometry is obtained with the CCD Camera on the 1.20-m telescope, both at the Haute-Provence Observatory. We report here the discovery of a new transiting hot Jupiter orbiting the star HD189733. The planetary nature of this object is confirmed by the observation of both the spectroscopic and photometric transits. The exoplanet HD189733b, with an orbital period of 2.219 days, has one of the shortest orbital periods detected by radial velocities, and presents the largest photometric depth in the light curve (~ 3%) observed to date. We estimate for the planet a mass of 1.15 +- 0.04 Mjup and a radius of 1.26 +- 0.03 RJup. Considering that HD189733 has the same visual magnitude as the well known exoplanet host star HD209458, further ground-based and space-based follow-up observations are very promising and will permit a characterization of the atmosphere and exosphere of this giant exoplanet., Comment: 5 pages, submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2005
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41. An intriguing correlation between the masses and periods of the transiting planets
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Mazeh, Tsevi, Zucker, Shay, and Pont, Frederic
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We point out an intriguing relation between the masses of the transiting planets and their orbital periods. For the six currently known transiting planets, the data are consistent with a decreasing linear relation. The other known short-period planets, discovered through radial-velocity techniques, seem to agree with this relation. We briefly speculate about a tentative physical model to explain such a dependence., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2004
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42. The 'missing link': a 4-day period transiting exoplanet around OGLE-TR-111
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Pont, Frederic, Bouchy, Francois, Queloz, Didier, Santos, Nuno, Melo, Claudio, Mayor, Michel, and Udry, Stephane
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a transiting hot Jupiter around OGLE-TR-111, from our radial velocity follow-up of OGLE transiting candidates in Carina. The planet has a mass of 0.53 +- 0.11 M_J and a radius of 1.0 +0.13-0.06 R_J. Three transiting exoplanets have already been found among OGLE candidates, all with periods near 1.5 days. The planet presented here, with P=4.0 days, is the first exoplanet detected by transits with the characteristics of a "normal" hot Jupiter, as found in abundance by radial velocity surveys The radius of OGLE-TR-111b and the scarcity of hot Jupiters detected among OGLE transit candidates tend to indicate that the case of HD209458b, with a radius of 1.4 R_J, is exceptional, with most hot Jupiters being smaller., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in A&A Letters
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- 2004
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43. Isochrone ages for field dwarfs: method and application to the age-metallicity relation
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Pont, Frederic and Eyer, Laurent
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
A new method is presented to compute age estimates from theoretical isochrones using temperature, luminosity and metallicity data for individual stars. Based on Bayesian probability theory, this method avoids the systematic biases affecting simpler strategies, and provides reliable estimates of the age probability distribution function for late-type dwarfs. This method is especially relevant for G dwarfs in the 3-15 Gyr range of ages, crucial to the study of the chemical and dynamical history of the Galaxy. We apply our method to the classic sample of Edvardsson et al. (1993), who derived the age-metallicity relation (AMR) of a sample of 189 field dwarfs with precisely determined abundances. Using new parallax, temperature and metallicity data, our age determination for the Edvardsson et al. sample indicates that the intrinsic dispersion in the AMR is at most 0.15 dex and probably lower. In particular, we show that old, metal-rich objects ([Fe/H]\sim 0.0 dex, age > 5 Gyr) and young, metal-poor objects ([Fe/H]<-0.5 dex, age < 6 Gyr) in many observed AMR plots are artifacts caused by a too simple treatment of the age determination, and that the Galactic AMR is monotonically increasing and rather well-defined. Incidentally, our results tend to restore confidence in the method of age determination from chromospheric activity for field dwarfs., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, to be published in MNRAS
- Published
- 2004
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44. The Chemical Enrichment History of the Fornax Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy from the Infrared Calcium Triplet
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Pont, Frederic, Zinn, Robert, Gallart, Carme, Hardy, Eduardo, and Winnick, Rebeccah
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Near infrared spectra were obtained for 117 red giants in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy with the FORS1 spectrograph on the VLT, in order to study the metallicity distribution of the stars and to lift the age-metallicity degeneracy of the red giant branch (RGB) in the color-magnitude diagram (CMD). Metallicities are derived from the equivalent widths of the infrared Calcium triplet lines at 8498, 8542, and 8662 A, calibrated with data from globular clusters, the open cluster M67 and the LMC. For a substantial portion of the sample, the strength of the Calcium triplet is unexpectedly high, clearly indicating that the main stellar population of Fornax is significantly more metal-rich than could be inferred from the position of its RGB in the CMD. We show that the relative narrowness of the RGB in Fornax is caused by the superposition of stars of very different ages and metallicities. The metallicity distribution in Fornax is centered at [Fe/H]= -0.9, with a metal-poor tail extending to [Fe/H] ~= -2. While the distribution to higher metallicities is less well determined by our observations, the comparison with LMC data indicates that it extends to [Fe/H] ~ -0.4. By comparing the metallicities of the stars with their positions in the CMD, we have derived the complex age-metallicity relation of Fornax. In the first few Gyr, the metal abundance rose to [Fe/H] ~ -1.0 dex. The enrichment accelerated in the past ~ 1-4 Gyr to reach [Fe/H] ~ -0.4 dex. More than half the sample is constituted of star younger than ~ 4 Gyr, thus indicating sustained recent star formation in Fornax. These results indicate that the capacity of dwarf spheroidal galaxies to retain the heavy elements that they produce is larger than expected. (Abridged), Comment: 36 pages, 19 figures, to appear in Astronomical Journal, January 2004
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- 2003
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45. The Cepheid Distance Scale after Hipparcos
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Pont, Frederic
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
More than two hundred classical cepheids were measured by the Hipparcos astrometric satellite, making possible a geometrical calibration of the cepheid distance scale. However, the large average distance of even the nearest cepheids measured by Hipparcos implies trigonometric parallaxes of at most a few mas. Determining unbiased distances and absolute magnitudes from such high relative error parallax data is not a trivial problem.In 1997, Feast & Catchpole announced that Hipparcos cepheid parallaxes indicated a Period-Luminosity scale 0.2 mag brighter than previous calibrations, with important consequences on the whole cosmic distance scale. In the wake of this initial study, several authors have reconsidered the question, and favour fainter calibrations of cepheid luminositites, compatible with pre-Hipparcos values. All authors used equivalent data sets, and the bulk of the difference in the results arises from the statistical treatment of the parallax data. We have attempted to repeat the analyses of all these studies and test them with Monte Carlo simulations and synthetic samples. We conclude that the initial Feast & Catchpole study is sound, and that the subsequent studies are subjected in several different ways to biases involved in the treatment of high relative error parallax data. We consider the source of these biases in some detail. We also propose a reappraisal of the error budget in the final Hipparcos cepheid result, leading to a PL relation -- adapted from Feast & Catchpole -- of M_V=-2.81 (assumed) log P -1.43 +-0.16 (stat) +0-0.03 (syst). We compare this calibration to recent values from cluster cepheids or the surface brightness method, and find that the overall agreement is good within the uncertainties., Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX
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- 1998
46. Data from Dual Relief of T-lymphocyte Proliferation and Effector Function Underlies Response to PD-1 Blockade in Epithelial Malignancies
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Balança, Camille-Charlotte, primary, Scarlata, Clara-Maria, primary, Michelas, Marie, primary, Devaud, Christel, primary, Sarradin, Victor, primary, Franchet, Camille, primary, Martinez Gomez, Carlos, primary, Gomez-Roca, Carlos, primary, Tosolini, Marie, primary, Heaugwane, Diana, primary, Lauzéral-Vizcaino, Françoise, primary, Mir-Mesnier, Lucile, primary, Féliu, Virginie, primary, Valle, Carine, primary, Pont, Frédéric, primary, Ferron, Gwénaël, primary, Gladieff, Laurence, primary, Motton, Stéphanie, primary, Tanguy Le Gac, Yann, primary, Dupret-Bories, Agnès, primary, Sarini, Jérôme, primary, Vairel, Benjamin, primary, Illac, Claire, primary, Siegfried-Vergnon, Aurore, primary, Mery, Eliane, primary, Fournié, Jean-Jacques, primary, Vergez, Sébastien, primary, Delord, Jean-Pierre, primary, Rochaix, Philippe, primary, Martinez, Alejandra, primary, and Ayyoub, Maha, primary
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- 2023
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47. Supplementary Figures and Tables from Dual Relief of T-lymphocyte Proliferation and Effector Function Underlies Response to PD-1 Blockade in Epithelial Malignancies
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Balança, Camille-Charlotte, primary, Scarlata, Clara-Maria, primary, Michelas, Marie, primary, Devaud, Christel, primary, Sarradin, Victor, primary, Franchet, Camille, primary, Martinez Gomez, Carlos, primary, Gomez-Roca, Carlos, primary, Tosolini, Marie, primary, Heaugwane, Diana, primary, Lauzéral-Vizcaino, Françoise, primary, Mir-Mesnier, Lucile, primary, Féliu, Virginie, primary, Valle, Carine, primary, Pont, Frédéric, primary, Ferron, Gwénaël, primary, Gladieff, Laurence, primary, Motton, Stéphanie, primary, Tanguy Le Gac, Yann, primary, Dupret-Bories, Agnès, primary, Sarini, Jérôme, primary, Vairel, Benjamin, primary, Illac, Claire, primary, Siegfried-Vergnon, Aurore, primary, Mery, Eliane, primary, Fournié, Jean-Jacques, primary, Vergez, Sébastien, primary, Delord, Jean-Pierre, primary, Rochaix, Philippe, primary, Martinez, Alejandra, primary, and Ayyoub, Maha, primary
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- 2023
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48. Supplementary Table 2 from Phosphoproteomics Identifies PI3K Inhibitor–selective Adaptive Responses in Pancreatic Cancer Cell Therapy and Resistance
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Cintas, Célia, primary, Douche, Thibault, primary, Dantes, Zahra, primary, Mouton-Barbosa, Emmanuelle, primary, Bousquet, Marie-Pierre, primary, Cayron, Coralie, primary, Therville, Nicole, primary, Pont, Frédéric, primary, Ramos-Delgado, Fernanda, primary, Guyon, Camille, primary, Garmy-Susini, Barbara, primary, Cappello, Paola, primary, Burlet-Schiltz, Odile, primary, Hirsch, Emilio, primary, Gomez-Brouchet, Anne, primary, Thibault, Benoît, primary, Reichert, Maximilian, primary, and Guillermet-Guibert, Julie, primary
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- 2023
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49. Supplementary Table 1 from Phosphoproteomics Identifies PI3K Inhibitor–selective Adaptive Responses in Pancreatic Cancer Cell Therapy and Resistance
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Cintas, Célia, primary, Douche, Thibault, primary, Dantes, Zahra, primary, Mouton-Barbosa, Emmanuelle, primary, Bousquet, Marie-Pierre, primary, Cayron, Coralie, primary, Therville, Nicole, primary, Pont, Frédéric, primary, Ramos-Delgado, Fernanda, primary, Guyon, Camille, primary, Garmy-Susini, Barbara, primary, Cappello, Paola, primary, Burlet-Schiltz, Odile, primary, Hirsch, Emilio, primary, Gomez-Brouchet, Anne, primary, Thibault, Benoît, primary, Reichert, Maximilian, primary, and Guillermet-Guibert, Julie, primary
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- 2023
- Full Text
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50. Data from Phosphoproteomics Identifies PI3K Inhibitor–selective Adaptive Responses in Pancreatic Cancer Cell Therapy and Resistance
- Author
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Cintas, Célia, primary, Douche, Thibault, primary, Dantes, Zahra, primary, Mouton-Barbosa, Emmanuelle, primary, Bousquet, Marie-Pierre, primary, Cayron, Coralie, primary, Therville, Nicole, primary, Pont, Frédéric, primary, Ramos-Delgado, Fernanda, primary, Guyon, Camille, primary, Garmy-Susini, Barbara, primary, Cappello, Paola, primary, Burlet-Schiltz, Odile, primary, Hirsch, Emilio, primary, Gomez-Brouchet, Anne, primary, Thibault, Benoît, primary, Reichert, Maximilian, primary, and Guillermet-Guibert, Julie, primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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