Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where A. Costille is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by A. Costille.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

First light of the VLT planet finder SPHERE III. New spectrophotometry and astrometry of the HR 8799 exoplanetary system

A. Zurlo; A. Vigan; R. Galicher; A.-L. Maire; D. Mesa; R. Gratton; G. Chauvin; M. Kasper; Claire Moutou; M. Bonnefoy; S. Desidera; Lyu Abe; Daniel Apai; Andrea Baruffolo; Pierre Baudoz; J. Baudrand; J.-L. Beuzit; P. Blancard; A. Boccaletti; F. Cantalloube; M. Carle; E. Cascone; Julien Charton; R. U. Claudi; A. Costille; V. De Caprio; Kjetil Dohlen; C. Dominik; D. Fantinel; Philippe Feautrier

Context. The planetary system discovered around the young A-type HR 8799 provides a unique laboratory to: a) test planet formation theories; b) probe the diversity of system architectures at these separations, and c) perform comparative (exo)planetology. Aims. We present and exploit new near-infrared images and integral-field spectra of the four gas giants surrounding HR 8799 obtained with SPHERE, the new planet finder instrument at the Very Large Telescope, during the commissioning and science verification phase of the instrument (July–December 2014). With these new data, we contribute to completing the spectral energy distribution (SED) of these bodies in the 1.0–2.5 μm range. We also provide new astrometric data, in particular for planet e, to further constrain the orbits. Methods. We used the infrared dual-band imager and spectrograph (IRDIS) subsystem to obtain pupil-stabilized, dual-band H2H3 (1.593 μm, 1.667 μm), K1K2 (2.110 μm, 2.251 μm), and broadband J (1.245 μm) images of the four planets. IRDIS was operated in parallel with the integral field spectrograph (IFS) of SPHERE to collect low-resolution (R ~ 30), near-infrared (0.94–1.64 μm) spectra of the two innermost planets HR 8799 d and e. The data were reduced with dedicated algorithms, such as the Karhunen-Loeve image projection (KLIP), to reveal the planets. We used the so-called negative planets injection technique to extract their photometry, spectra, and measure their positions. We illustrate the astrometric performance of SPHERE through sample orbital fits compatible with SPHERE and literature data. Results. We demonstrated the ability of SPHERE to detect and characterize planets in this kind of systems, providing spectra and photometry of its components. The spectra improve upon the signal-to-noise ratio of previously obtained data and increase the spectral coverage down to the Y band. In addition, we provide the first detection of planet e in the J band. Astrometric positions for planets HR 8799 bcde are reported for the epochs of July, August, and December 2014. We measured the photometric values in J, H2H3, K1K2 bands for the four planets with a mean accuracy of 0.13 mag. We found upper limit constraints on the mass of a possible planet f of 3–7 MJup . Our new measurements are more consistent with the two inner planets d and e being in a 2d:1e or 3d:2e resonance. The spectra of HR 8799 d and e are well matched by those of L6-8 field dwarfs. However, the SEDs of these objects are redder than field L dwarfs longward of 1.6 μm.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

First light of the VLT planet finder SPHERE I. Detection and characterization of the substellar companion GJ 758 B

A. Vigan; M. Bonnefoy; C. Ginski; H. Beust; R. Galicher; Markus Janson; J.-L. Baudino; Esther Buenzli; J. Hagelberg; Valentina D'Orazi; S. Desidera; A.-L. Maire; R. Gratton; Jean-François Sauvage; G. Chauvin; C. Thalmann; L. Malo; G. Salter; A. Zurlo; J. Antichi; Andrea Baruffolo; Pierre Baudoz; P. Blanchard; A. Boccaletti; J.-L. Beuzit; M. Carle; R. U. Claudi; A. Costille; A. Delboulbé; Kjetil Dohlen

GJ 758 B is a brown dwarf companion to a nearby (15.76%) solar-type, metal-rich (M/H = +0.2 dex) main-sequence star (G9V) that was discovered with Subaru/HiCIAO in 2009. From previous studies, it has drawn attention as being the coldest (similar to 600 K) companion ever directly imaged around a neighboring star. We present new high-contrast data obtained during the commissioning of the SPHERE instrument at the Very Large Telescope (VLT). The data was obtained in Y-, J-, H-, and K-s-bands with the dual-band imaging (DBI) mode of IRDIS, thus providing a broad coverage of the full near-infrared (near-IR) range at higher contrast and better spectral sampling than previously reported. In this new set of high-quality data, we report the re-detection of the companion, as well as the first detection of a new candidate closer-in to the star. We use the new eight photometric points for an extended comparison of GJ 758 B with empirical objects and four families of atmospheric models. From comparison to empirical object, we estimate a T8 spectral type, but none of the comparison objects can accurately represent the observed near-IR fluxes of GJ 758 B. From comparison to atmospheric models, we attribute a T-eff = 600 +/- 100 K, but we find that no atmospheric model can adequately fit all the fluxes of GJ 758 B. The lack of exploration of metal enrichment in model grids appears as a major limitation that prevents an accurate estimation of the companion physical parameters. The photometry of the new candidate companion is broadly consistent with L-type objects, but a second epoch with improved photometry is necessary to clarify its status. The new astrometry of GJ 758 B shows a significant proper motion since the last epoch. We use this result to improve the determination of the orbital characteristics using two fitting approaches: Least-Squares Monte Carlo and Markov chain Monte Carlo. We confirm the high-eccentricity of the orbit (peak at 0.5), and find a most likely semi-major axis of 46.05 AU. We also use our imaging data, as well as archival radial velocity data, to reject the possibility that this is a false positive effect created by an unseen, closer-in, companion. Finally, we analyze the sensitivity of our data to additional closer-in companions and reject the possibility of other massive brown dwarf companions down to 4-5 AU.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

First light of the VLT planet finder SPHERE IV : Physical and chemical properties of the planets around HR8799

M. Bonnefoy; A. Zurlo; J.-L. Baudino; Philip W. Lucas; D. Mesa; A. L. Maire; A. Vigan; R. Galicher; D. Homeier; F. Marocco; R. Gratton; G. Chauvin; F. Allard; S. Desidera; M. Kasper; Claire Moutou; A.-M. Lagrange; J. Antichi; Andrea Baruffolo; J. Baudrand; J.-L. Beuzit; A. Boccaletti; F. Cantalloube; M. Carbillet; Julien Charton; R. U. Claudi; A. Costille; Kjetil Dohlen; C. Dominik; D. Fantinel

Context. The system of fourplanets discovered around the intermediate-mass star HR8799 offers a unique opportunity to test planet formation theories at large orbital radii and to probe the physics and chemistry at play in the atmospheres of self-luminous young (~30 Myr) planets. We recently obtained new photometry of the four planets and low-resolution (R ~ 30) spectra of HR8799 d and e with the SPHERE instrument (Paper III). Aims. In this paper (Paper IV), we aim to use these spectra and available photometry to determine how they compare to known objects, what the planet physical properties are, and how their atmospheres work. Methods. We compare the available spectra, photometry, and spectral energy distribution (SED) of the planets to field dwarfs and young companions. In addition, we use the extinction from corundum, silicate (enstatite and forsterite), or iron grains likely to form in the atmosphere of the planets to try to better understand empirically the peculiarity of their spectrophotometric properties. To conclude, we use three sets of atmospheric models (BT-SETTL14, Cloud-AE60, Exo-REM) to determine which ingredients are critically needed in the models to represent the SED of the objects, and to constrain their atmospheric parameters (T_(eff), log g, M/H). Results. We find that HR8799d and e properties are well reproduced by those of L6-L8 dusty dwarfs discovered in the field, among which some are candidate members of young nearby associations. No known object reproduces well the properties of planets b and c. Nevertheless, we find that the spectra and WISE photometry of peculiar and/or young early-T dwarfs reddened by submicron grains made of corundum, iron, enstatite, or forsterite successfully reproduce the SED of these planets. Our analysis confirms that only the Exo-REM models with thick clouds fit (within 2σ) the whole set of spectrophotometric datapoints available for HR8799 d and e for T_(eff) = 1200 K, log g in the range 3.0−4.5, and M/H = +0.5. The models still fail to reproduce the SED of HR8799c and b. The determination of the metallicity, log g, and cloud thickness are degenerate. Conclusions. Our empirical analysis and atmospheric modelling show that an enhanced content in dust and decreased CIA of H_2 is certainly responsible for the deviation of the properties of the planet with respect to field dwarfs. The analysis suggests in addition that HR8799c and b have later spectral types than the two other planets, and therefore could both have lower masses.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Shadows cast on the transition disk of HD 135344B - Multiwavelength VLT/SPHERE polarimetric differential imaging

T. Stolker; C. Dominik; H. Avenhaus; M. Min; J. de Boer; C. Ginski; H. M. Schmid; A. Juhász; A. Bazzon; L. B. F. M. Waters; A. Garufi; J.-C. Augereau; M. Benisty; A. Boccaletti; Th. Henning; M. Langlois; A. L. Maire; Francois Menard; Michael R. Meyer; Christophe Pinte; Sascha P. Quanz; C. Thalmann; J.-L. Beuzit; Marcel Carbillet; A. Costille; Kjetil Dohlen; Markus Feldt; Daniel Gisler; David Mouillet; A. Pavlov

Context. The protoplanetary disk around the F-type star HD 135344B (SAO 206462) is in a transition stage and shows many intriguing structures both in scattered light and thermal (sub-) millimeter emission which are possibly related to planet formation processes. Aims. We aim to study the morphology and surface brightness of the disk in scattered light to gain insight into the innermost disk regions, the formation of protoplanets, planet-disk interactions traced in the surface and midplane layers, and the dust grain properties of the disk surface. Methods. We have carried out high-contrast polarimetric differential imaging (PDI) observations with VLT/SPHERE and obtained polarized scattered light images with ZIMPOL in the R and I-bands and with IRDIS in the Y and J-bands. The scattered light images and surface brightness profiles are used to study in detail structures in the disk surface and brightness variations. We have constructed a 3D radiative transfer model to support the interpretation of several detected shadow features. Results. The scattered light images reveal with unprecedented angular resolution and sensitivity the spiral arms as well as the 25 au cavity of the disk. Multiple shadow features are discovered on the outer disk with one shadow only being present during the second observation epoch. A positive surface brightness gradient is observed in the stellar irradiation corrected (r(2)-scaled) images in southwest direction possibly due to an azimuthally asymmetric perturbation of the temperature and/or surface density by the passing spiral arms. The disk integrated polarized flux, normalized to the stellar flux, shows a positive trend towards longer wavelengths which we attribute to large (2 pi alpha \textgreater= lambda) aggregate dust grains in the disk surface. Part of the non-azimuthal polarization signal in the U-phi image of the J-band observation can be attributed to multiple scattering in the disk. Conclusions. The detected shadow features and their possible variability have the potential to provide insight into the structure of and processes occurring in the innermost disk regions. Possible explanations for the presence of the shadows include a 22 degrees misaligned inner disk, a warped disk region that connects the inner disk with the outer disk, and variable or transient phenomena such as a perturbation of the inner disk or an asymmetric accretion flow. The spiral arms are best explained by one or multiple protoplanets in the exterior of the disk although no gap is detected beyond the spiral arms up to 1.0.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2010

Wide field adaptive optics laboratory demonstration with closed-loop tomographic control.

A. Costille; Cyril Petit; Jean-Marc Conan; Caroline Kulcsár; Henri-François Raynaud; Thierry Fusco

HOMER, the new bench developed at ONERA devoted to wide field adaptive optics (WFAO) laboratory research, has allowed the first experimental validations of multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) and laser tomography adaptive optics (LTAO) concepts with a linear quadratic Gaussian (LQG) control approach. Results obtained in LTAO in closed loop show the significant gain in performance brought by LQG control, which allows tomographic reconstruction. We present a calibration and model identification strategy. Experimental results are shown to be consistent with end-to-end simulations. These results are very encouraging and demonstrate robustness of performance with respect to inevitable experimental uncertainties. They represent a first step for the study of very large telescope (VLT) and extremely large telescopes (ELT) instruments.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Final performance and lesson-learned of SAXO, the VLT-SPHERE extreme AO: from early design to on-sky results

Thierry Fusco; J.-F. Sauvage; Cyril Petit; A. Costille; Kjetil Dohlen; David Mouillet; Jean-Luc Beuzit; M. Kasper; M. Suarez; Christian Soenke; Enrico Fedrigo; Mark Downing; Pierre Baudoz; A. Sevin; Denis Perret; A. Barrufolo; Bernardo Salasnich; Pascal Puget; F. Feautrier; S. Rochat; T. Moulin; A. Deboulbé; Emmanuel Hugot; A. Vigan; Dimitri Mawet; J. H. Girard; Norbert Hubin

The extreme AO system, SAXO (SPHERE AO for eXoplanet Observation), is the heart of the SPHERE system, feeding the scientific instruments with flat wave front corrected from all the atmospheric turbulence and internal defects. We will present the final performance of SAXO obtained during the instrument AIT in Europe as well as the very first on-sky results. The main requirements and system characteristics will be recalled and the full AO loop performance will be quantified and compared to original specifications. It will be demonstrated that SAXO meets or even exceeds (especially its limit magnitude and its jitter residuals) its challenging requirements (more than 90% of SR in H band and a 3 mas residual jitter). Finally, after 10 years of AO developments, from early design to final on-sky implementations, some critical system aspects as well as some important lesson-learned will be presented in the perspective of the future generation of complex AO systems for VLTs and ELTs.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

SPHERE eXtreme AO control scheme: final performance assessment and on sky validation of the first auto-tuned LQG based operational system

Cyril Petit; J.-F. Sauvage; Thierry Fusco; A. Sevin; M. Suarez; A. Costille; A. Vigan; Christian Soenke; Denis Perret; S. Rochat; A. Barrufolo; Bernardo Salasnich; J.-L. Beuzit; Kjetil Dohlen; David Mouillet; Pascal Puget; F. Wildi; M. Kasper; Jean-Marc Conan; Caroline Kulcsár; Henri-François Raynaud

The SPHERE (Spectro-Polarimetry High-contrast Exoplanet Research) instrument is an ESO project aiming at the direct detection of extra-solar planets. SPHERE has been successfully integrated and tested in Europe end 2013 and has been re-integrated at Paranal in Chile early 2014 for a first light at the beginning of May. The heart of the SPHERE instrument is its eXtreme Adaptive Optics (XAO) SAXO (SPHERE AO for eXoplanet Observation) subsystem that provides extremely high correction of turbulence and very accurate stabilization of images for coronagraphic purpose. However, SAXO, as well as the overall instrument, must also provide constant operability overnights, ensuring robustness and autonomy. An original control scheme has been developed to satisfy this challenging dichotomy. It includes in particular both an Optimized Modal Gain Integrator (OMGI) to control the Deformable Mirror (DM) and a Linear Quadratic Gaussian (LQG) control law to manage the tip-tilt (TT) mirror. LQG allows optimal estimation and prediction of turbulent angle of arrival but also of possible vibrations. A specific and unprecedented control scheme has been developed to continuously adapt and optimize LQG control ensuring a constant match to turbulence and vibrations characteristics. SPHERE is thus the first operational system implementing LQG, with automatic adjustment of its models. SAXO has demonstrated performance beyond expectations during tests in Europe, in spite of internal limitations. Very first results have been obtained on sky last May. We thus come back to SAXO control scheme, focusing in particular on the LQG based TT control and the various upgrades that have been made to enhance further the performance ensuring constant operability and robustness. We finally propose performance assessment based on in lab performance and first on sky results and discuss further possible improvements.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Calibration of quasi-static aberrations in exoplanet direct-imaging instruments with a Zernike phase-mask sensor - II. Concept validation with ZELDA on VLT/SPHERE

Mamadou N'Diaye; A. Vigan; Kjetil Dohlen; Jean-François Sauvage; A. Caillat; A. Costille; J. H. Girard; J.-L. Beuzit; T. Fusco; P. Blanchard; J. Le Merrer; D. Le Mignant; Fabrice Madec; Gabriel Moreaux; David Mouillet; Pascal Puget; G. Zins

Warm or massive gas giant planets, brown dwarfs, and debris disks around nearby stars are now routinely observed by dedicated high-contrast imaging instruments on large, ground-based observatories. These facilities include extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) and state-of-the-art coronagraphy to achieve unprecedented sensitivities for exoplanet detection and spectral characterization. However, differential aberrations between the ExAO sensing path and the science path represent a critical limitation for the detection of giant planets with a contrast lower than a few


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

Speckle temporal stability in XAO coronagraphic images - II. Refine model for quasi-static speckle temporal evolution for VLT/SPHERE

P. Martinez; M. Kasper; A. Costille; J. F. Sauvage; K. Dohlen; Pascal Puget; J.-L. Beuzit

10^{-6}


Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2016

SAXO: the extreme adaptive optics system of SPHERE (I) system overview and global laboratory performance

Jean-François Sauvage; T. Fusco; Cyril Petit; A. Costille; David Mouillet; Jean-Luc Beuzit; Kjetil Dohlen; Markus Kasper; M. Suarez; Christian Soenke; Andrea Baruffolo; Bernardo Salasnich; S. Rochat; Enrico Fedrigo; Pierre Baudoz; Emmanuel Hugot; A. Sevin; Denis Perret; F. Wildi; Mark Downing; Philippe Feautrier; Pascal Puget; A. Vigan; Jared O'Neal; J. H. Girard; Dimitri Mawet; Hans Martin Schmid; Ronald Roelfsema

at very small separations (<0.3\as) from their host star. In our previous work, we proposed a wavefront sensor based on Zernike phase contrast methods to circumvent this issue and measure these quasi-static aberrations at a nanometric level. We present the design, manufacturing and testing of ZELDA, a prototype that was installed on VLT/SPHERE during its reintegration in Chile. Using the internal light source of the instrument, we performed measurements in the presence of Zernike or Fourier modes introduced with the deformable mirror. Our experimental and simulation results are consistent, confirming the ability of our sensor to measure small aberrations (<50 nm rms) with nanometric accuracy. We then corrected the long-lived non-common path aberrations in SPHERE based on ZELDA measurements. We estimated a contrast gain of 10 in the coronagraphic image at 0.2\as, reaching the raw contrast limit set by the coronagraph in the instrument. The simplicity of the design and its phase reconstruction algorithm makes ZELDA an excellent candidate for the on-line measurements of quasi-static aberrations during the observations. The implementation of a ZELDA-based sensing path on the current and future facilities (ELTs, future space missions) could ease the observation of the cold gaseous or massive rocky planets around nearby stars.

Collaboration


Dive into the A. Costille's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kjetil Dohlen

Aix-Marseille University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Mouillet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.-L. Beuzit

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Vigan

Aix-Marseille University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cyril Petit

Office National d'Études et de Recherches Aérospatiales

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Kasper

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Wildi

University of Geneva

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean-Luc Beuzit

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge