Matching Items (3)
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- All Subjects: Gamma Ray Bursts
- Creators: Butler, Nathaniel
Description
The field of exoplanet science has matured over the past two decades with over 3500 confirmed exoplanets. However, many fundamental questions regarding the composition, and formation mechanism remain unanswered. Atmospheres are a window into the properties of a planet, and spectroscopic studies can help resolve many of these questions. For the first part of my dissertation, I participated in two studies of the atmospheres of brown dwarfs to search for weather variations. To understand the evolution of weather on brown dwarfs we conducted a multi-epoch study monitoring four cool brown dwarfs to search for photometric variability. These cool brown dwarfs are predicted to have salt and sulfide clouds condensing in their upper atmosphere and we detected one high amplitude variable. Combining observations for all T5 and later brown dwarfs we note a possible correlation between variability and cloud opacity.
For the second half of my thesis, I focused on characterizing the atmospheres of directly imaged exoplanets. In the first study Hubble Space Telescope data on HR8799, in wavelengths unobservable from the ground, provide constraints on the presence of clouds in the outer planets. Next, I present research done in collaboration with the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) team including an exploration of the instrument contrast against environmental parameters, and an examination of the environment of the planet in the HD 106906 system. By analyzing archival HST data and examining the near-infrared colors of HD 106906b, we conclude that the companion shows weak evidence of a circumplanetary dust disk or cloud. Finally, I measure the properties of the low mass directly imaged planet 51 Eridani b. We combined published J, H spectra with updated LP photometry, new K1, K2 spectra, and MS photometry. The new data confirms that the planet has redder than similar spectral type objects, which might be due to the planet still transitioning from to L-to-T. Model atmospheres indicate a cooler effective temperature best fit by a patchy cloud atmosphere making 51 Eri b an excellent candidate for future variability studies with the James Webb Space Telescope.
For the second half of my thesis, I focused on characterizing the atmospheres of directly imaged exoplanets. In the first study Hubble Space Telescope data on HR8799, in wavelengths unobservable from the ground, provide constraints on the presence of clouds in the outer planets. Next, I present research done in collaboration with the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) team including an exploration of the instrument contrast against environmental parameters, and an examination of the environment of the planet in the HD 106906 system. By analyzing archival HST data and examining the near-infrared colors of HD 106906b, we conclude that the companion shows weak evidence of a circumplanetary dust disk or cloud. Finally, I measure the properties of the low mass directly imaged planet 51 Eridani b. We combined published J, H spectra with updated LP photometry, new K1, K2 spectra, and MS photometry. The new data confirms that the planet has redder than similar spectral type objects, which might be due to the planet still transitioning from to L-to-T. Model atmospheres indicate a cooler effective temperature best fit by a patchy cloud atmosphere making 51 Eri b an excellent candidate for future variability studies with the James Webb Space Telescope.
ContributorsRajan, Abhijith (Author) / Patience, Jennifer (Thesis advisor) / Young, Patrick (Thesis advisor) / Scowen, Paul (Committee member) / Butler, Nathaniel (Committee member) / Shkolnik, Evgenya (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
Description
Several key, open questions in astrophysics can be tackled by searching for and
mining large datasets for transient phenomena. The evolution of massive stars and
compact objects can be studied over cosmic time by identifying supernovae (SNe) and
gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) in other galaxies and determining their redshifts. Modeling
GRBs and their afterglows to probe the jets of GRBs can shed light on the emission
mechanism, rate, and energetics of these events.
In Chapter 1, I discuss the current state of astronomical transient study, including
sources of interest, instrumentation, and data reduction techniques, with a focus
on work in the infrared. In Chapter 2, I present original work published in the
Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, testing InGaAs infrared
detectors for astronomical use (Strausbaugh, Jackson, and Butler 2018); highlights of
this work include observing the exoplanet transit of HD189773B, and detecting the
nearby supernova SN2016adj with an InGaAs detector mounted on a small telescope
at ASU. In Chapter 3, I discuss my work on GRB jets published in the Astrophysical
Journal Letters, highlighting the interesting case of GRB 160625B (Strausbaugh et al.
2019), where I interpret a late-time bump in the GRB afterglow lightcurve as evidence
for a bright-edged jet. In Chapter 4, I present a look back at previous years of
RATIR (Re-ionization And Transient Infra-Red Camera) data, with an emphasis on
the efficiency of following up GRBs detected by the Fermi Space Telescope, before
some final remarks and brief discussion of future work in Chapter 5.
mining large datasets for transient phenomena. The evolution of massive stars and
compact objects can be studied over cosmic time by identifying supernovae (SNe) and
gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) in other galaxies and determining their redshifts. Modeling
GRBs and their afterglows to probe the jets of GRBs can shed light on the emission
mechanism, rate, and energetics of these events.
In Chapter 1, I discuss the current state of astronomical transient study, including
sources of interest, instrumentation, and data reduction techniques, with a focus
on work in the infrared. In Chapter 2, I present original work published in the
Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, testing InGaAs infrared
detectors for astronomical use (Strausbaugh, Jackson, and Butler 2018); highlights of
this work include observing the exoplanet transit of HD189773B, and detecting the
nearby supernova SN2016adj with an InGaAs detector mounted on a small telescope
at ASU. In Chapter 3, I discuss my work on GRB jets published in the Astrophysical
Journal Letters, highlighting the interesting case of GRB 160625B (Strausbaugh et al.
2019), where I interpret a late-time bump in the GRB afterglow lightcurve as evidence
for a bright-edged jet. In Chapter 4, I present a look back at previous years of
RATIR (Re-ionization And Transient Infra-Red Camera) data, with an emphasis on
the efficiency of following up GRBs detected by the Fermi Space Telescope, before
some final remarks and brief discussion of future work in Chapter 5.
ContributorsStrausbaugh, Robert (Author) / Butler, Nathaniel (Thesis advisor) / Jansen, Rolf (Committee member) / Mauskopf, Phil (Committee member) / Windhorst, Rogier (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
Description
At the start of this honors thesis project, a new telescope called the deca-degree optical transient imager (DDOTI) needed assistance to help it gather photometric data about Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs). Contributions to help DDOTI produce scientifically ready reductions will be discussed.
First, performance assessment tests were run in order to prevent data backlog and optimize the way in which DDOTI reduces the data it collects. The results of these tests yielded a general framework regarding how DDOTI should reduce collected images depending on how many computer cores can be used. These tests also indicated that DDOTI’s alignment portion of the reduction code (ddoti_align) should be completed after every image is collected, while the other parts of the reduction software (ddoti_stack, ddoti_phot, ddoti_summary) should be run after every four images are collected.
Second, reductions created by DDOTI were inspected to determine if the telescope’s reduction software was working properly. Reductions were observed and indicated that two reduction related problems needed to be corrected by the research team before DDOTI would be ready for future scientific work. The first identified problem was that DDOTI’s reduction code was not properly correcting optical distortions for one of DDOTI’s two functional cameras. The second problem was that the reduction code was not correcting for atmospheric refraction. As a result, below zenith distances of approximately sixty degrees, ddoti_align was unable to align detected sources to their catalogue equivalents due to their distorted positions.
Third, code manuals were produced in both English and Spanish so that English and Spanish-speaking researchers working on DDOTI could understand how its reductions software reduces images. Functional flow chart diagrams were also produced only in English to graphically describe the flow of information through DDOTI’s reduction software.
These three contributions helped DDOTI to more accurately be able to observe GRBs. DDOTI’s improved reduction abilities were confirmed by a produced report about GRB 190129B after a 10-hour observation, and by the fact that DDOTI could accurately observed asteroid fields. In addition, code manuals and functional flow chart diagrams were all produced by the end of this project.
First, performance assessment tests were run in order to prevent data backlog and optimize the way in which DDOTI reduces the data it collects. The results of these tests yielded a general framework regarding how DDOTI should reduce collected images depending on how many computer cores can be used. These tests also indicated that DDOTI’s alignment portion of the reduction code (ddoti_align) should be completed after every image is collected, while the other parts of the reduction software (ddoti_stack, ddoti_phot, ddoti_summary) should be run after every four images are collected.
Second, reductions created by DDOTI were inspected to determine if the telescope’s reduction software was working properly. Reductions were observed and indicated that two reduction related problems needed to be corrected by the research team before DDOTI would be ready for future scientific work. The first identified problem was that DDOTI’s reduction code was not properly correcting optical distortions for one of DDOTI’s two functional cameras. The second problem was that the reduction code was not correcting for atmospheric refraction. As a result, below zenith distances of approximately sixty degrees, ddoti_align was unable to align detected sources to their catalogue equivalents due to their distorted positions.
Third, code manuals were produced in both English and Spanish so that English and Spanish-speaking researchers working on DDOTI could understand how its reductions software reduces images. Functional flow chart diagrams were also produced only in English to graphically describe the flow of information through DDOTI’s reduction software.
These three contributions helped DDOTI to more accurately be able to observe GRBs. DDOTI’s improved reduction abilities were confirmed by a produced report about GRB 190129B after a 10-hour observation, and by the fact that DDOTI could accurately observed asteroid fields. In addition, code manuals and functional flow chart diagrams were all produced by the end of this project.
ContributorsWolfram, Tanner Reid (Author) / Butler, Nathaniel (Thesis director) / Scowen, Paul (Committee member) / Vargas, Daniel (Committee member) / Department of Physics (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor, Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05