Barnaby Norris
University of Sydney
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Featured researches published by Barnaby Norris.
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2014
H. Sana; J.-B. Le Bouquin; Sylvestre Lacour; Jean-Philippe Berger; Gilles Duvert; L. Gauchet; Barnaby Norris; J. Olofsson; D. Pickel; G. Zins; Olivier Absil; A. de Koter; Kaitlin M. Kratter; O. Schnurr; Hans Zinnecker
Multiplicity is one of the most fundamental observable properties of massive O-type stars and offers a promising way to discriminate between massive star formation theories. Nevertheless, companions at separations between 1 and 100 milliarcsec (mas) remain mostly unknown due to intrinsic observational limitations. At a typical distance of 2 kpc, this corresponds to projected physical separations of 2–200 AU. The Southern MAssive Stars at High angular resolution survey (smash+) was designed to fill this gap by providing the first systematic interferometric survey of Galactic massive stars. We observed 117 O-type stars with VLTI/PIONIER and 162 O-type stars with NACO/ Sparse Aperture Masking (SAM), probing the separation ranges 1–45 and 30–250 mas and brightness contrasts of Δ H< 4 and Δ H< 5, respectively. Taking advantage of NACO’s field of view, we further uniformly searched for visual companions in an 8 �� radius down to ΔH = 8. This paper describes observations and data analysis, reports the discovery of almost 200 new companions in the separation range from 1 mas to 8 �� and presents a catalog of detections, including the first resolved measurements of over a dozen known long-period spectroscopic binaries. Excluding known runaway stars for which no companions are detected, 96 objects in our main sample ( δ< 0 ◦ ; H< 7.5) were observed both with PIONIER and NACO/SAM. The fraction of these stars with at least one resolved companion within 200 mas is 0.53. Accounting for known but unresolved spectroscopic or eclipsing companions, the multiplicity fraction at separation ρ< 8 �� increases to fm = 0.91 ± 0.03. The fraction of luminosity class V stars that have a bound companion reaches 100% at 30 mas while their average number of physically connected companions within 8 �� is fc = 2.2 ± 0.3. This demonstrates that massive stars form nearly exclusively in multiple systems. The nine non-thermal radio emitters observed by smash+ are all resolved, including the newly discovered pairs HD 168112 and CPD−47 ◦ 2963. This lends strong support to the universality of the wind-wind collision
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2015
Nemanja Jovanovic; Frantz Martinache; Olivier Guyon; Christophe Clergeon; Garima Singh; Tomoyuki Kudo; Vincent Garrel; K. Newman; D. Doughty; Julien Lozi; Jared R. Males; Y. Minowa; Yutaka Hayano; Naruhisa Takato; J.-I. Morino; Jonas Kühn; Eugene Serabyn; Barnaby Norris; Peter G. Tuthill; Guillaume Schworer; Paul Stewart; Laird M. Close; Elsa Huby; G. Perrin; Sylvestre Lacour; L. Gauchet; Sebastien Vievard; Naoshi Murakami; Fumika Oshiyama; Naoshi Baba
The Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) instrument is a multipurpose high-contrast imaging platform designed for the discovery and detailed characterization of exoplanetary systems and serves as a testbed for high-contrast imaging technologies for ELTs. It is a multi-band instrument which makes use of light from 600 to 2500nm allowing for coronagraphic direct exoplanet imaging of the inner 3 lambda/D from the stellar host. Wavefront sensing and control are key to the operation of SCExAO. A partial correction of low-order modes is provided by Subarus facility adaptive optics system with the final correction, including high-order modes, implemented downstream by a combination of a visible pyramid wavefront sensor and a 2000-element deformable mirror. The well corrected NIR (y-K bands) wavefronts can then be injected into any of the available coronagraphs, including but not limited to the phase induced amplitude apodization and the vector vortex coronagraphs, both of which offer an inner working angle as low as 1 lambda/D. Non-common path, low-order aberrations are sensed with a coronagraphic low-order wavefront sensor in the infrared (IR). Low noise, high frame rate, NIR detectors allow for active speckle nulling and coherent differential imaging, while the HAWAII 2RG detector in the HiCIAO imager and/or the CHARIS integral field spectrograph (from mid 2016) can take deeper exposures and/or perform angular, spectral and polarimetric differential imaging. Science in the visible is provided by two interferometric modules: VAMPIRES and FIRST, which enable sub-diffraction limited imaging in the visible region with polarimetric and spectroscopic capabilities respectively. We describe the instrument in detail and present preliminary results both on-sky and in the laboratory.
Nature | 2012
Barnaby Norris; Peter G. Tuthill; Michael J. Ireland; Sylvestre Lacour; Albert A. Zijlstra; Foteini Lykou; T. Evans; Paul Stewart; Timothy R. Bedding
An intermediate-mass star ends its life by ejecting the bulk of its envelope in a slow, dense wind. Stellar pulsations are thought to elevate gas to an altitude cool enough for the condensation of dust, which is then accelerated by radiation pressure, entraining the gas and driving the wind. Explaining the amount of mass loss, however, has been a problem because of the difficulty of observing tenuous gas and dust only tens of milliarcseconds from the star. For this reason, there is no consensus on the way sufficient momentum is transferred from the light from the star to the outflow. Here we report spatially resolved, multiwavelength observations of circumstellar dust shells of three stars on the asymptotic giant branch of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. When imaged in scattered light, dust shells were found at remarkably small radii (less than about two stellar radii) and with unexpectedly large grains (about 300 nanometres in radius). This proximity to the photosphere argues for dust species that are transparent to the light from the star and, therefore, resistant to sublimation by the intense radiation field. Although transparency usually implies insufficient radiative pressure to drive a wind, the radiation field can accelerate these large grains through photon scattering rather than absorption—a plausible mass loss mechanism for lower-amplitude pulsating stars.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012
Nemanja Jovanovic; Peter G. Tuthill; Barnaby Norris; Simon Gross; Paul Stewart; Ned Charles; Sylvestre Lacour; Martin Ams; Jon Lawrence; Andrew Lehmann; C. Niel; J. G. Robertson; Graham D. Marshall; Michael J. Ireland; Alexander Fuerbach; Michael J. Withford
In the two decades since the first extra-solar planet was discovered, the detection and characterization of extra-solar planets has become one of the key endeavours in all of modern science. Recently, direct detection techniques such as interferometry or coronagraphy have received growing attention because they reveal the population of exoplanets inaccessible to Doppler or transit techniques, and moreover they allow the faint signal from the planet itself to be investigated. Next-generation stellar interferometers are increasingly incorporating photonic technologies due to the increase in fidelity of the data generated. Here, we report the design, construction and commissioning of a new high-contrast imager, the integrated pupil-remapping interferometer, an instrument we expect will find application in the detection of young faint companions in the nearest star-forming regions. The laboratory characterization of the instrument demonstrated high-visibility fringes on all interferometer baselines in addition to stable closure phase signals. We also report the first successful on-sky experiments with the prototype instrument at the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope. Performance metrics recovered were consistent with ideal device behaviour after accounting for expected levels of decoherence and signal loss from the uncompensated seeing. The prospect of complete Fourier coverage coupled with the current performance metrics means that this photonically enhanced instrument is well positioned to contribute to the science of high-contrast companions.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
Benjamin Pope; Nick Cvetojevic; Anthony Cheetham; Frantz Martinache; Barnaby Norris; Peter G. Tuthill
In astronomy and microscopy, distortions in the wavefront affect the dynamic range of a high contrast imaging system. These aberrations are either imposed by a turbulent medium such as the atmosphere, by static or thermal aberrations in the optical path, or by imperfectly phased subapertures in a segmented mirror. Active and adaptive optics (AO), consisting of a wavefront sensor and a deformable mirror, are employed to address this problem. Nevertheless, the non-common-path between the wavefront sensor and the science camera leads to persistent quasi-static speckles that are difficult to calibrate and which impose a floor on the image contrast. In this paper we present the first experimental demonstration of a novel wavefront sensor requiring only a minor asymmetric obscuration of the pupil, using the science camera itself to detect high order wavefront errors from the speckle pattern produced. We apply this to correct errors imposed on a deformable microelectromechanical (MEMS) segmented mirror in a closed loop, restoring a high quality point spread function (PSF) and residual wavefront errors of order
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
Aaron C. Rizzuto; Michael J. Ireland; James Robertson; Yitping Kok; Peter G. Tuthill; Benjamin A. Warrington; Xavier Haubois; William J. Tango; Barnaby Norris; Theo A. ten Brummelaar; Adam L. Kraus; A. P. Jacob; C Laliberte-Houdeville
\sim 10
Applied Optics | 2012
Ned Charles; Nemanja Jovanovic; Simon Gross; Paul Stewart; Barnaby Norris; John W. O'Byrne; Jon Lawrence; Michael J. Withford; Peter G. Tuthill
nm using 1600 nm light, from a starting point of
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
Barnaby Norris; Guillaume Schworer; Peter G. Tuthill; Nemanja Jovanovic; Olivier Guyon; Paul Stewart; Frantz Martinache
\sim 300
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Peter G. Tuthill; Sylvestre Lacour; Paola Amico; Michael J. Ireland; Barnaby Norris; Paul Stewart; T. Evans; Adam L. Kraus; C. Lidman; E. Pompei; Nicholas Kornweibel
nm in piston and
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
F. Lykou; Daniela Klotz; Claudia Paladini; J. Hron; Albert A. Zijlstra; J. Kluska; Barnaby Norris; Peter G. Tuthill; Sofia Ramstedt; E. Lagadec; Markus Wittkowski; Matthias Maercker; A. Mayer
\sim 0.3
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Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems
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