Showing posts with label M-type star. Show all posts
Showing posts with label M-type star. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Rare quadruple star system could unlock mystery of brown dwarfs

An artist's impression of the UPM J1040−3551 system against the backdrop of the Milky Way as observed by Gaia. On the left, UPM J1040−3551 Aa & Ab appears as a distant bright orange dot, with an inset revealing these two M-type stars in orbit. On the right, in the foreground, a pair of cold brown dwarfs – UPM J1040−3551 Ba & Bb – orbit each other for a period of decades while collectively circling UPM J1040−3551 Aab in a vast orbit that takes over 100,000 years to complete. Credit: Jiaxin Zhong/Zenghua Zhang
Licence type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)

The "exciting" discovery of an extremely rare quadruple star system could significantly advance our understanding of brown dwarfs, astronomers say.

These mysterious objects are too big to be considered a planet but also too small to be a star because they lack the mass to keep fusing atoms and blossom into fully-fledged suns.

In a new breakthrough published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS), astronomers have now identified an extremely rare hierarchical quadruple star system consisting of a pair of cold brown dwarfs orbiting a pair of young red dwarf stars, located 82 light-years from Earth in the constellation Antlia.

The system, named UPM J1040−3551 AabBab, was identified by an international research team led by Professor Zenghua Zhang, of Nanjing University.

The researchers made their discovery using common angular velocity measured by the European Space Agency’s Gaia astrometric satellite and NASA\s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), followed by comprehensive spectroscopic observations and analysis.

That’s because this wide binary pair need more than 100,000 years to complete one orbit around each other, so their orbital motion cannot be seen in years. Researchers therefore had to analyse how they are moving towards the same direction with the same angular velocity.

In this system, Aab refers to the brighter stellar pair Aa and Ab, while Bab refers to the fainter substellar pair Ba and Bb.

"What makes this discovery particularly exciting is the hierarchical nature of the system, which is required for its orbit to remain stable over a long time period," said Professor Zhang.

"These two pairs of objects are orbiting each other separately for periods of decades, while the pairs are also orbiting a common centre of mass over a period of more than 100,000 years."

The two pairs are separated by 1,656 astronomical units (au), where 1 au equals the Earth-Sun distance. The brighter pair, UPM J1040−3551 Aab, consists of two nearly equal-mass red dwarf stars, which appear orange in colour when observed in visible wavelengths.

With a visual magnitude of 14.6, this pair is approximately 100,000 times fainter than Polaris (the North Star) in visible wavelengths. In fact, no red dwarf star is bright enough to be seen with the naked eye – not even Proxima Centauri, our closest stellar neighbour at 4.2 light-years away. To make UPM J1040−3551 Aab visible without optical aid, this binary pair would need to be brought to within 1.5 light-years of Earth, placing it closer than any star in our current cosmic neighbourhood.

The fainter pair, UPM J1040−3551 Bab, comprises two much cooler brown dwarfs that emit virtually no visible light and appear roughly 1,000 times dimmer than the Aab pair when observed in near-infrared wavelengths, where they are most easily detected.

The close binary nature of UPM J1040−3551 Aab was initially suspected due to its wobbling photocentre during Gaia's observations and confirmed by its unusual brightness – approximately 0.7 magnitude brighter than a single star with the same temperature at the same distance, as the combined light from the nearly equal-mass pair effectively doubles the output.

Similarly, UPM J1040−3551 Bab was identified as another close binary through its abnormally bright infrared measurements compared to typical brown dwarfs of its spectral type. Spectral fitting analysis strongly supported this conclusion, with binary templates providing a significantly better match than single-object templates.

Dr Felipe Navarete, of the Brazilian National Astrophysics Laboratory, led the critical spectroscopic observations that helped characterise the system components.

Using the Goodman spectrograph on the Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, a Program of NSF NOIRLab, Dr Navarete obtained optical spectra of the brighter pair, while also capturing near-infrared spectra of the fainter pair with SOAR's TripleSpec instrument.

"These observations were challenging due to the faintness of the brown dwarfs," said Dr Navarete, "but the capabilities of SOAR allowed us to collect the crucial spectroscopic data needed to understand the nature of these objects."

Their analysis revealed that both components of the brighter pair are M-type red dwarfs with temperatures of approximately 3,200 Kelvin (about 2,900°C) and masses of about 17 per cent that of the Sun.

The fainter pair are more exotic objects: two T-type brown dwarfs with temperatures of 820 Kelvin (550°C) and 690 Kelvin (420°C), respectively.

Brown dwarfs are small and dense low-mass objects, with the brown dwarfs in this system having sizes similar to the planet Jupiter but masses estimated to be 10-30 times greater. Indeed, at the low end of this range these objects could be considered "planetary mass" objects.

"This is the first quadruple system ever discovered with a pair of T-type brown dwarfs orbiting two stars," said Dr MariCruz Gálvez-Ortiz of the Center for Astrobiology in Spain, a co-author of the research paper.

"The discovery provides a unique cosmic laboratory for studying these mysterious objects."

Unlike stars, brown dwarfs continuously cool throughout their lifetime, which changes their observable properties such as temperature, luminosity, and spectral features.

This cooling process creates a fundamental challenge in brown dwarf research known as the "age-mass degeneracy problem".

An isolated brown dwarf with a certain temperature could be a younger, less massive object or an older, more massive one – astronomers cannot distinguish between these possibilities without additional information.

"Brown dwarfs with wide stellar companions whose ages can be determined independently are invaluable at breaking this degeneracy as age benchmarks," explained Professor Hugh Jones, of the University of Hertfordshire, a co-author of the research paper.

"UPM J1040−3551 is particularly valuable because H-alpha emission from the brighter pair indicates the system is relatively young, between 300 million and 2 billion years old."

The team believes the brown dwarf pair (UPM J1040−3551 Bab) could potentially be resolved with high-resolution imaging techniques in the future, enabling precise measurements of their orbital motion and dynamical masses.

"This system offers a dual benefit for brown dwarf science," said co-researcher Professor Adam Burgasser, of the University of California San Diego.

"It can serve as an age benchmark to calibrate low-temperature atmosphere models, and as a mass benchmark to test evolutionary models if we can resolve the brown dwarf binary and track its orbit."

The discovery of the UPM J1040−3551 system represents a significant advancement in he understanding of these elusive objects and the diverse formation paths for stellar systems in the neighbourhood of the Sun.




Media contacts:

Sam Tonkin (Submitted by)
Royal Astronomical Society
Mob: +44 (0)7802 877 700

press@ras.ac.uk

Science contacts:

Professor Zenghua Zhang
Nanjing University

zz@nju.edu.cn



Further information

The paper ‘Benchmark brown dwarfs – I. A blue M2 + T5 wide binary and a probable young M4 + [T7 + T8] hierarchical triple’ by Zenghua, Zhang et al. has been published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. DOI:10.1093/mnras/staf895.



Notes for editors

About the Royal Astronomical Society

The Royal Astronomical Society (RAS), founded in 1820, encourages and promotes the study of astronomy, solar-system science, geophysics and closely related branches of science.

The RAS organises scientific meetings, publishes international research and review journals, recognises outstanding achievements by the award of medals and prizes, maintains an extensive library, supports education through grants and outreach activities and represents UK astronomy nationally and internationally. Its more than 4,000 members (Fellows), a third based overseas, include scientific researchers in universities, observatories and laboratories as well as historians of astronomy and others.

The RAS accepts papers for its journals based on the principle of peer review, in which fellow experts on the editorial boards accept the paper as worth considering. The Society issues press releases based on a similar principle, but the organisations and scientists concerned have overall responsibility for their content.

Keep up with the RAS on
 Instagram, Bluesky, LinkedIn, Facebook and YouTube.

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Discovery of an Exo-Venus: a Key to Find Extraterrestrial Life

Figure 1: Artist’s conception of the newly discovered planet Gliese 12 b, which is orbiting a red dwarf star located 40 light-years away. This artist's conception assumes that the planet retains a tenuous atmosphere. Future follow-up observations will clarify what kind of atmosphere the planet actually retains. A high resolution image is here (1.9 MB). Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)

An international team led by scientists from the Astrobiology Center in Japan, the University of Tokyo, the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, and Tokyo Institute of Technology has successfully discovered a new extrasolar planet named Gliese 12 b through a collaboration between NASA's TESS campaign and a strategic survey program (SSP) of the Subaru Telescope. Gliese 12 b has a size similar to Earth and Venus, and is orbiting around its host star, Gliese 12, with a period of 12.8 days. Despite its close proximity to its host star, the amount of radiation Gliese 12 b receives is comparable to that of Venus, because the host star is much cooler than the Sun. The planet may still retain a certain amount of atmosphere, making it one of the most suitable targets out of all of the planets discovered so far to investigate the atmosphere of a planet like Venus. It remains an open question why the surface environment of Venus – a sibling of Earth – became so harsh for life compared to that of Earth. In the near future, NASA's JWST and extremely large telescopes, such as TMT, will be used to characterize the atmosphere of Gliese 12 b in detail, greatly improving our understanding of the conditions necessary for habitability.

Is Earth a special planet with its wide variety of life? Or are planets bearing life common in this Universe? In order to answer these fundamental questions, we need to look for clues from other planets that are similar to Earth. In particular, Venus in the Solar System is an important target. Venus's size and mass are very similar to those of Earth, so Venus is called "Earth's sibling." Nevertheless, its atmosphere is thick and dry and thus not like Earth's. Why did Venus develop a surface environment that is significantly different from Earth's? Although Venus's insolation – the amount of light a planet receives from the host star – is slightly higher than Earth's insolation, the answer to the above question remains unclear. Indeed, scientists don't understand why a planet develops an environment suitable for bearing life. To better understand that question, it is essential to get hints from not only Venus but also an "exo-Venus," which is a Venus-like planet outside the Solar System.

Since the 1990s, more than 5,500 planets orbiting around stars other than the Sun have been discovered by various detection methods. In particular, the Kepler satellite launched by NASA in 2009 played a major role in the discoveries and was the first to discover planets with sizes comparable to or smaller than Earth. However, as these planets are hundreds of light years away from Earth, it is challenging to characterize their atmospheres in detail with the current or even up-coming telescopes.

The current trend is to discover planets orbiting M-type stars, which are less massive than the Sun, in the vicinity of the Solar System. This is because if the star is less massive or smaller, it is easier to detect a change in the host star's velocity and brightness that originates from the orbital motion of a planet. The method to detect the velocity change is called the "Doppler" technique, while that to detect the brightness change is called the "transit" technique.

To use the Doppler technique, astronomers carry out spectroscopic observations, in which stellar light is divided into many "rainbows." A huge amount of light is required for this analysis. M-type stars are faint at visual wavelengths but bright at infrared wavelengths. So, the Subaru Telescope started a large program to search for planets via the Doppler technique in 2019 using the newly-developed infrared spectrograph, IRD. Between 2019 and 2022, the astronomers extensively monitored Gliese 12, a star located 40 light-years away in the direction of the concentration Pisces, as one of the targets of the IRD-SSP observing campaign. Gliese 12 is an M-type star one-fourth the size of the Sun, with a surface temperature of 3,000 ℃, which is 2500 ℃ cooler than the Sun.

Gliese 12, was also observed by NASA's TESS space telescope between August 2021 and October 2023. The TESS team detected signs of a planet candidate with a size similar to Earth and reported the detection in April, 2023. This report motivated the astronomers to start the follow-up observations for validating the candidate signal with the multi-color simultaneous cameras MuSCAT2 and MuSCAT3, which were developed by the Astrobiology Center (ABC) and the University of Tokyo. The analysis of the data taken with TESS and the MuSCAT series determined the orbital period of Gliese 12 b to be 12.8 days and the radius to be 0.96 Earth radii. Furthermore, the astronomers constrained the mass of Gliese 12 b to be less than 3.9 Earth masses by combining the Doppler velocity measurements taken with IRD and those with CARMENES on the Calar Alto 3.5 m telescope in southern Spain.

What kind of planet is Gliese 12 b? The orbital period of this planet, that is to say one year on this planet, is just 12.8 days. This translates to a distance between the star and the planet of only 0.07 au, where one au corresponds to the Earth–Sun distance. However, the amount of insolation Gliese 12 b receives is only 1.6 times higher than that of Earth, or similar to that of Venus (which is 1.9 times higher than Earth's), thanks to the low temperature of the host star. Nevertheless, even with such a relatively weak insolation, the planetary surface would be hot enough to start the runaway evaporation of liquid water from the surface.

Meanwhile, whether liquid water can be stably retained on the surface of a planet depends on the composition and thickness of the atmosphere. For example, even if the surface temperature of a planet is appropriate, the planet cannot retain water as a liquid on the surface if the atmosphere is too thin. However, the characteristics of the atmospheres of extrasolar planets have been poorly understood.

A well-known system for study of planetary atmospheres is the TRAPPIST-1 system, a cool M-type star with seven terrestrial planets. Among the planets around TRAPPIST-1, the second-closest planet to the star, TRAPPIST-1 c, is very similar to Gliese 12 b and Venus in size (1.1 Earth radii) and insolation (2.2 times Earth's insolation). However, recent observations by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) revealed that the atmosphere of TRAPPIST-1 c is at least not as thick as that of Venus. TRAPPIST-1 is active enough to release strong radiation such as X-ray and ultraviolet light, and high-energy particles like stellar winds. Most of the planet's atmosphere might have been dissipated by this high-energy radiation in the past.

In contrast, the X-ray luminosity of Gliese 12 is an order of magnitude weaker than that of TRAPPIST-1. In addition, the distance between Gliese 12 b and its host star is more than 4 times larger than that between TRAPPIST-1 c and its host. Accordingly, the effect of high-energy radiation on Gliese 12 b is much weaker than that on TRAPPIST-1 c, making it possible that Gliese 12 b might retain a certain amount of atmosphere compared with TRAPPIST-1 c.

Given that Gliese 12 is a neighbor of the Sun, Gliese 12 b is an ideal target for atmosphere characterizations with JWST and future 30-m class telescopes, alongside TRAPPIST-1. In the future, by observing the atmosphere of Gliese 12 b and comparing it with those of Venus and TRAPPIST-1 c, scientists will be able to reveal how the atmospheres of terrestrial planets vary depending on the radiation environments around the host stars.

Although Venus currently does not retain liquid water on the surface, it might have in the past. Likewise, it cannot be fully ruled out that liquid water is present on Gliese 12 b's surface. "Follow-up observations with JWST and future ground-based observations with 30-m class telescopes for transit spectroscopy are expected to determine whether Gliese 12 b has an atmosphere and whether the atmosphere contains molecular components associated with life such as water vapor, oxygen, and carbon dioxide," says Masayuki Kuzuhara, a project assistant professor of the Astrobiology Center (ABC).

There results were published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters on May 23, 2024 (Kuzuhara, Fukui et al. "Gliese 12 b: A temperate Earth-sized planet at 12pc ideal for atmospheric transmission spectroscopy").

Gliese 12 b
Credit: 4D2U project, NAOJ, NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)




About the Subaru Telescope

The Subaru Telescope is a large optical-infrared telescope operated by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, National Institutes of Natural Sciences with the support of the MEXT Project to Promote Large Scientific Frontiers. We are honored and grateful for the opportunity of observing the Universe from Maunakea, which has cultural, historical, and natural significance in Hawai`i.



Relevant Links



Thursday, December 14, 2017

Mars Mission Sheds Light on Habitability of Distant Planets

This illustration depicts charged particles from a solar storm stripping away charged particles of Mars' atmosphere, one of the processes of Martian atmosphere loss studied by NASA's MAVEN mission, beginning in 2014. Unlike Earth, Mars lacks a global magnetic field that could deflect charged particles emanating from the Sun. Image credit: NASA/GSFC.  › Full image and caption


To receive the same amount of starlight as Mars receives from our Sun, a planet orbiting an M-type red dwarf would have to be positioned much closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun. Image credit: NASA/GSFC.  › Full image and caption


How long might a rocky, Mars-like planet be habitable if it were orbiting a red dwarf star? It's a complex question but one that NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission can help answer.

"The MAVEN mission tells us that Mars lost substantial amounts of its atmosphere over time, changing the planet's habitability," said David Brain, a MAVEN co-investigator and a professor at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado Boulder. "We can use Mars, a planet that we know a lot about, as a laboratory for studying rocky planets outside our solar system, which we don't know much about yet."

At the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union on Dec. 13, 2017, in New Orleans, Louisiana, Brain described how insights from the MAVEN mission could be applied to the habitability of rocky planets orbiting other stars. 

MAVEN carries a suite of instruments that have been measuring Mars' atmospheric loss since November 2014. The studies indicate that Mars has lost the majority of its atmosphere to space over time through a combination of chemical and physical processes. The spacecraft's instruments were chosen to determine how much each process contributes to the total escape.

In the past three years, the Sun has gone through periods of higher and lower solar activity, and Mars also has experienced solar storms, solar flares and coronal mass ejections. These varying conditions have given MAVEN the opportunity to observe Mars' atmospheric escape getting cranked up and dialed down.

Brain and his colleagues started to think about applying these insights to a hypothetical Mars-like planet in orbit around some type of M-star, or red dwarf, the most common class of stars in our galaxy.

The researchers did some preliminary calculations based on the MAVEN data. As with Mars, they assumed that this planet might be positioned at the edge of the habitable zone of its star. But because a red dwarf is dimmer overall than our Sun, a planet in the habitable zone would have to orbit much closer to its star than Mercury is to the Sun.

The brightness of a red dwarf at extreme ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths combined with the close orbit would mean that the hypothetical planet would get hit with about 5 to 10 times more UV radiation than the real Mars does. That cranks up the amount of energy available to fuel the processes responsible for atmospheric escape. Based on what MAVEN has learned, Brain and colleagues estimated how the individual escape processes would respond to having the UV cranked up.

Their calculations indicate that the planet's atmosphere could lose 3 to 5 times as many charged particles, a process called ion escape. About 5 to 10 times more neutral particles could be lost through a process called photochemical escape, which happens when UV radiation breaks apart molecules in the upper atmosphere.

Because more charged particles would be created, there also would be more sputtering, another form of atmospheric loss. Sputtering happens when energetic particles are accelerated into the atmosphere and knock molecules around, kicking some of them out into space and sending others crashing into their neighbors, the way a cue ball does in a game of pool.

Finally, the hypothetical planet might experience about the same amount of thermal escape, also called Jeans escape. Thermal escape occurs only for lighter molecules, such as hydrogen. Mars loses its hydrogen by thermal escape at the top of the atmosphere. On the exo-Mars, thermal escape would increase only if the increase in UV radiation were to push more hydrogen to the top of the atmosphere.

Altogether, the estimates suggest that orbiting at the edge of the habitable zone of a quiet M-class star, instead of our Sun, could shorten the habitable period for the planet by a factor of about 5 to 20. For an M-star whose activity is amped up like that of a Tasmanian devil, the habitable period could be cut by a factor of about 1,000 -- reducing it to a mere blink of an eye in geological terms. The solar storms alone could zap the planet with radiation bursts thousands of times more intense than the normal activity from our Sun.

However, Brain and his colleagues have considered a particularly challenging situation for habitability by placing Mars around an M-class star. A different planet might have some mitigating factors -- for example, active geological processes that replenish the atmosphere to a degree, a magnetic field to shield the atmosphere from stripping by the stellar wind, or a larger size that gives more gravity to hold on to the atmosphere. 

"Habitability is one of the biggest topics in astronomy, and these estimates demonstrate one way to leverage what we know about Mars and the Sun to help determine the factors that control whether planets in other systems might be suitable for life," said Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN's principal investigator at the University of Colorado Boulder.

MAVEN's principal investigator is based at the University of Colorado's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, Boulder. The university provided two science instruments and leads science operations, as well as education and public outreach, for the mission. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the MAVEN project and provided two science instruments for the mission. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California, manages the Mars Exploration Program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. 

For more information about MAVEN, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/maven


News Media Contact

Laurie Cantillo / Dwayne Brown
NASA Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1077 / 202-358-1726

laura.l.cantillo@nasa.gov / dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov

Written by Elizabeth Zubritsky
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.



Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Nearby Exo-Earth Family Withstands Extreme Scrutiny

Artist’s concept of what the view might be like from inside the TRAPPIST-1 exoplanetary system showing three Earth-sized planets in orbit around the low-mass star. This alien planetary system is located only 40 light years away. Gemini South telescope imaging, the highest resolution images ever taken of the star, revealed no additional stellar companions providing strong evidence that three small, probably rocky planets orbit this star. Credit: Robert Hurt/JPL/Caltech. 


Astronomers combined the power of the 8-meter Gemini South telescope in Chile with an extremely high-resolution camera to scrutinize the star TRAPPIST-1. Previous observations of the star, which is only about 8% the mass of our Sun, revealed dips in the star’s light output that would be expected if several Earth-sized planets orbited the star. However, the situation would be greatly complicated if, upon closer examination, the star was found to have a yet-unseen stellar companion. 

No such companion was found with Gemini, which essentially seals the case for multiple Earth-sized planets orbiting TRAPPIST-1. 

Steve Howell of NASA’s Ames Research Center led the extremely high-resolution observations using the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument (DSSI), an instrument he has used before at both Gemini telescopes to probe other exoplanetary systems. The new observations reinforced the hypothesis that several Earth-sized planets are responsible for the fluctuations in the star’s brightness. “By finding no additional stellar companions in the star’s vicinity we confirm that a family of smallish planets orbit this star,” says Howell. “Using Gemini we can see closer to this star than the orbit of Mercury to our Sun. Gemini with DSSI is unique in being able to do this, bar none.” 

The research, led by Howell, is published in the September 13th issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters

TRAPPIST-1 is what astronomers call a late M-type star; stars which are small, ultra-cool (compared to most stars), and faint. Late M stars are so faint that the only specimens we can observe are relatively close-by in space and, as the Gemini observations demonstrate, allow astronomers to probe very close to these stars in the search for companions. 

“While no current telescope can actually image an Earth-size planet around another star, even if orbiting a nearby star such as TRAPPIST-1, our instrument on Gemini allows us to detect close companion stars and even brown dwarfs.” says Elliott Horch, [Southern Connecticut State University] co-author of the paper. “Such observations validate not only the existence of exoplanets, but their small size as well.” 

M stars are of great interest to astronomers today as their diminutive size allows easier detection of small, Earth-size planets. The intrinsic faintness of M stars means that potentially habitable planets will have short orbital periods, on the order of weeks. Such planets will be the targets of detailed study by both ground- and space-based telescopes, studies that will attempt to measure the composition of their atmospheres and see if they are indeed Earth-like beyond just their size.

The discovery of TRAPPIST-1’s likely exoplanet pedigree began late in 2015 with data from the TRAPPIST (the TRansiting Planets and PlanetesImals Small Telescope) project. This work, published in the 12 May 2016 issue of the journal Nature, and led by Michael Gillon, observed TRAPPIST-1 over 62 nights. During that period, the star was found to fluctuate in a manner that is consistent with at least three Earth-sized planets orbiting and periodically eclipsing and blocking part of the star’s light from our view on the Earth. While work is still ongoing to refine the total number of planets, two of them appear to orbit in 1.5 and 2.4 days and are so close that they receive four and two times the radiation that our Earth receives from the Sun, respectively. The third planet is more difficult to characterize, having possible orbital periods between 4 to 73 days. However, this third planet’s most likely period, 18 days, would place this world well within the system’s habitable-zone where liquid water could exist on its surface. 

The Gemini observations, made with the DSSI instrument, were made during a temporary visit of the instrument at the Gemini South telescope in Chile. “Gemini’s flourishing Visitor Instrument program is producing superb results in all areas of astronomy,” said Chris Davis, a program director at the U.S. National Science Foundation, one of the agencies that funds the International Gemini Observatory and which also provided initial funding for DSSI. “The DSSI observations of the TRAPPIST-1 system of exoplanets is just one example. The instrument team and their collaborators deserve credit for building such a versatile and productive instrument and also for making it available to all of Gemini’s users." 

The DSSI instrument on Gemini provides a unique capability to characterize the environment around exoplanetary systems. The instrument provides extreme-resolution images by taking multiple extremely short (60 millisecond) exposures of a star to capture fine detail and “freeze” the turbulence caused by the Earth’s atmosphere. By combining the images and removing the momentary distortions caused by the Earth’s atmosphere, the final images yield a resolution equal to what the telescope would produce if it was in space. With this technique, called speckle interferometry, astronomers can see details at, or very near, the theoretical limit of the 8-meter Gemini mirror yielding the highest-resolution single telescope images available to astronomers. The available resolution is like being able to separate an automobile’s two headlights at a distance of about 2000 miles.


Science Contacts:

Dr. Steve B. Howell
Project Scientist, NASA K2 Mission
NASA Ames Research Center
Email:
steve.b.howell@nasa.gov
Desk: 650.604.4238
Cel: 520.461.6925


Dr. Elliott P. Horch
Professor of Physics, Southern Connecticut State University
Email:
horche2@southernct.edu
Desk: 203-392-6393
Cell: 203-214-4310



Media Contacts:

Peter Michaud
Gemini Observatory
Hilo, Hawai‘i
Email:
pmichaud@gemini.edu
Desk: (56) 51-2205-628
Available (in Chile) until 9/12/16


Manuel Paredes
Gemini Observatory
Gemini South Base Facility, La Serena, Chile
Email:
mparedes@gemini.edu
Cell: (56) 51-2205-671