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Dive into the research topics where Cassy L. Davison is active.

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Featured researches published by Cassy L. Davison.


The Astronomical Journal | 2014

THE SOLAR NEIGHBORHOOD. XXXIII. PARALLAX RESULTS FROM THE CTIOPI 0.9 m PROGRAM: TRIGONOMETRIC PARALLAXES OF NEARBY LOW-MASS ACTIVE AND YOUNG SYSTEMS

Adric R. Riedel; Charlie T. Finch; Todd J. Henry; John P. Subasavage; Wei-Chun Jao; Lison Malo; David R. Rodriguez; Russel J. White; Douglas R. Gies; Sergio B. Dieterich; Jennifer G. Winters; Cassy L. Davison; Edmund P. Nelan; Sarah C. Blunt; Kelle L. Cruz; Emily L. Rice; Philip A. Ianna

We present basic observational data and association membership analysis for 45 young and active low-mass stellar systems from the ongoing RECONS photometry and astrometry program at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. Most of these systems have saturated X-ray emission (log(Lx/Lbol) > -3.5) based on X-ray fluxes from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey, and many are significantly more luminous than main-sequence stars of comparable color. We present parallaxes and proper motions, Johnson-Kron-Cousins VRI photometry, and multiplicity observations from the CTIOPI program on the CTIO 0.9m telescope. To this we add low-resolution optical spectroscopy and line measurements from the CTIO 1.5m telescope, and interferometric binary measurements from the Hubble Space Telescope Fine Guidance Sensors. We also incorporate data from published sources: JHKs photometry from the 2MASS point source catalog; X-ray data from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey; and radial velocities from literature sources. Within the sample of 45 systems, we identify 21 candidate low-mass pre-main-sequence members of nearby associations, including members of beta Pictoris, TW Hydrae, Argus, AB Doradus, two ambiguous 30 Myr old systems, and one object that may be a member of the Ursa Major moving group. Of the 21 candidate young systems, 14 are newly identified as a result of this work, and six of those are within 25 parsecs of the Sun.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2012

Design and Construction of Absorption Cells for Precision Radial Velocities in the K Band Using Methane Isotopologues

Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Peter Plavchan; Sean M. Mills; Peter Gao; Edgardo García-Berríos; Nathan S. Lewis; Keeyoon Sung; David R. Ciardi; C. Beichman; Carolyn Brinkworth; John Asher Johnson; Cassy L. Davison; Russel J. White; L. Prato

We present a method to optimize absorption cells for precise wavelength calibration in the near-infrared. We apply it to design and optimize methane isotopologue cells for precision radial velocity measurements in the K band. We also describe the construction and installation of two such cells for the CSHELL spectrograph at NASA’s IRTF. We have obtained their high-resolution laboratory spectra, which we can then use in precision radial velocity measurements and which can also have other applications. In terms of obtainable RV precision, methane should outperform other proposed cells, such as the ammonia cell (^(14)NH_3) recently demonstrated on CRIRES/VLT. The laboratory spectra of the ammonia and methane cells show strong absorption features in the H band that could also be exploited for precision Doppler measurements. We present spectra and preliminary radial velocity measurements obtained during our first-light run. These initial results show that a precision down to 20-30 m s^(-1)can be obtained using a wavelength interval of only 5 nm in the K band and S/N ∼ 150. This supports the prediction that a precision down to a few meters per second can be achieved on late-M dwarfs using the new generation of NIR spectrographs, thus enabling the detection of terrestrial planets in their habitable zones. Doppler measurements in the NIR can also be used to mitigate the radial velocity jitter due to stellar activity, enabling more efficient surveys on young active stars.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

DISCOVERY AND CHARACTERIZATION OF WIDE BINARY SYSTEMS WITH A VERY LOW MASS COMPONENT

Frédérique Baron; David Lafrenière; Étienne Artigau; René Doyon; Jonathan Gagné; Cassy L. Davison; Lison Malo; Jasmin Robert; Daniel Nadeau; C. Reylé

We report the discovery of 14 low-mass binary systems containing mid-M to mid-L dwarf companions with separations larger than 250 AU. We also report the independent discovery of 9 other systems with similar characteristics that were recently discovered in other studies. We have identified these systems by searching for common proper motion sources in the vicinity of known high proper motion stars, based on a cross-correlation of wide area near-infrared surveys (2MASS, SDSS, and SIMP). An astrometric follow-up, for common proper motion confirmation, was made with SIMON and/or CPAPIR at the OMM 1.6 m and CTIO 1.5 m telescopes for all the candidates identified. A spectroscopic follow-up was also made with GMOS or GNIRS at Gemini to determine the spectral types of 11 of our newly identified companions and 10 of our primaries. Statistical arguments are provided to show that all of the systems we report here are very likely to be physical binaries. One of the new systems reported features a brown dwarf companion: LSPM J1259+1001 (M5) has an L4.5 (2M1259+1001) companion at about 340 AU. This brown dwarf was previously unknown. Seven other systems have a companion of spectral type L0-L1 at a separation in the 250-7500 AU range. Our sample includes 14 systems with a mass ratio below 0.3.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Precision near-infrared radial velocity instrumentation II: noncircular core fiber scrambler

Peter Plavchan; Michael Bottom; Peter Gao; James K. Wallace; B. Mennesson; David R. Ciardi; S. Crawford; S. Lin; C. A. Beichman; Carolyn Brinkworth; John Asher Johnson; Cassy L. Davison; Russel J. White; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; K. von Braun; Gautam Vasisht; L. Prato; Stephen R. Kane; Angelle Maria Tanner; Bernie Walp; Sean M. Mills

We have built and commissioned a prototype agitated non-circular core ber scrambler for precision spectroscopic radial velocity measurements in the near-infrared H band. We have collected the rst on-sky performance and modal noise tests of these novel bers in the near-infrared at H and K bands using the CSHELL spectrograph at the NASA InfraRed Telescope Facility (IRTF). We discuss the design behind our novel reverse injection of a red laser for co-alignment of star-light with the ber tip via a corneWe have built and commissioned a prototype agitated non-circular core fiber scrambler for precision spectroscopic radial velocity measurements in the near-infrared H band. We have collected the first on-sky performance and modal noise tests of these novel fibers in the near-infrared at H and K bands using the CSHELL spectrograph at the NASA InfraRed Telescope Facility (IRTF). We discuss the design behind our novel reverse injection of a red laser for co-alignment of star-light with the fiber tip via a corner cube and visible camera. We summarize the practical details involved in the construction of the fiber scrambler, and the mechanical agitation of the fiber at the telescope. We present radial velocity measurements of a bright standard star taken with and without the fiber scrambler to quantify the relative improvement in the obtainable blaze function stability, the line spread function stability, and the resulting radial velocity precision. We assess the feasibility of applying this illumination stabilization technique to the next generation of near-infrared spectrographs such as iSHELL on IRTF and an upgraded NIRSPEC at Keck. Our results may also be applied in the visible for smaller core diameter fibers where Fiber modal noise is a significant factor, such as behind an adaptive optics system or on a small < 1 meter class telescope such as is being pursued by the MINERVA and LCOGT collaborations.r cube and visible camera. We summarize the practical details involved in the construction of the ber scrambler, and the mechanical agitation of the ber at the telescope. We present radial velocity measurements of a bright standard star taken with and without the ber scrambler to quantify the relative improvement in the obtainable blaze function stability, the line spread function stability, and the resulting radial velocity precision. We assess the feasibility of applying this illumination stabilization technique to the next generation of near-infrared spectrographs such as iSHELL on IRTF and an upgraded NIRSPEC at Keck. Our results may also be applied in the visible for smaller core diameter bers where ber modal noise is a signi cant factor, such as behind an adaptive optics system or on a small < 1 meter class telescope such as is being pursued by the MINERVA and LCOGT collaborations.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

A High-Precision Near-Infrared Survey for Radial Velocity Variable Low-Mass Stars Using Cshell and a Methane Gas Cell

Jonathan Gagné; Peter Plavchan; Peter Gao; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Elise Furlan; Cassy L. Davison; Angelle Maria Tanner; Todd J. Henry; Adric R. Riedel; Carolyn Brinkworth; David W. Latham; Michael Bottom; Russel J. White; Sean M. Mills; C. Beichman; John Asher Johnson; David R. Ciardi; K. Wallace; B. Mennesson; Kaspar von Braun; Gautam Vasisht; L. Prato; Stephen R. Kane; Eric E. Mamajek; Bernie Walp; Timothy J. Crawford; Raphaël Rougeot; Claire S. Geneser; Joseph H. Catanzarite

We present the results of a precise near-infrared (NIR) radial velocity (RV) survey of 32 low-mass stars with spectral types K2-M4 using CSHELL at the NASA InfraRed Telescope Facility in the K band with an isotopologue methane gas cell to achieve wavelength calibration and a novel, iterative RV extraction method. We surveyed 14 members of young (≈25-150 Myr) moving groups, the young field star ϵ Eridani, and 18 nearby (<25 pc) low-mass stars and achieved typical single-measurement precisions of 8-15 m s-1with a long-term stability of 15-50 m s-1 over longer baselines. We obtain the best NIR RV constraints to date on 27 targets in our sample, 19 of which were never followed by high-precision RV surveys. Our results indicate that very active stars can display long-term RV variations as low as ∼25-50 m s-1 at ≈2.3125 μm, thus constraining the effect of jitter at these wavelengths. We provide the first multiwavelength confirmation of GJ 876 bc and independently retrieve orbital parameters consistent with previous studies. We recovered RV variabilities for HD 160934 AB and GJ 725 AB that are consistent with their known binary orbits, and nine other targets are candidate RV variables with a statistical significance of 3σ-5σ. Our method, combined with the new iSHELL spectrograph, will yield long-term RV precisions of ≲5 m s-1 in the NIR, which will allow the detection of super-Earths near the habitable zone of mid-M dwarfs.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2016

Retrieval of precise radial velocities from near-infrared high-resolution spectra of low-mass stars

Peter Gao; Peter Plavchan; Jonathan Gagné; Elise Furlan; Michael Bottom; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Russel J. White; Cassy L. Davison; C. A. Beichman; Carolyn Brinkworth; John Asher Johnson; David R. Ciardi; K Wallace; B. Mennesson; K. von Braun; Gautam Vasisht; L. Prato; Stephen R. Kane; Angelle Maria Tanner; Timothy J. Crawford; D. W. Latham; R Rougeot; Claire S. Geneser; J Catanzarite

Given that low-mass stars have intrinsically low luminosities at optical wavelengths and a propensity for stellar activity, it is advantageous for radial velocity (RV) surveys of these objects to use near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. In this work, we describe and test a novel RV extraction pipeline dedicated to retrieving RVs from low-mass stars using NIR spectra taken by the CSHELL spectrograph at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, where a methane isotopologue gas cell is used for wavelength calibration. The pipeline minimizes the residuals between the observations and a spectral model composed of templates for the target star, the gas cell, and atmospheric telluric absorption; models of the line-spread function, continuum curvature, and sinusoidal fringing; and a parameterization of the wavelength solution. The stellar template is derived iteratively from the science observations themselves without a need for separate observations dedicated to retrieving it. Despite limitations from CSHELLs narrow wavelength range and instrumental systematics, we are able to (1) obtain an RV precision of 35 m s^(−1) for the RV standard star GJ 15 A over a time baseline of 817 days, reaching the photon noise limit for our attained signal-to-noise ratio; (2) achieve ~3 m s^(−1) RV precision for the M giant SV Peg over a baseline of several days and confirm its long-term RV trend due to stellar pulsations, as well as obtain nightly noise floors of ~2–6 m s^(−1); and (3) show that our data are consistent with the known masses, periods, and orbital eccentricities of the two most massive planets orbiting GJ 876. Future applications of our pipeline to RV surveys using the next generation of NIR spectrographs, such as iSHELL, will enable the potential detection of super-Earths and mini-Neptunes in the habitable zones of M dwarfs.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Precision near-infrared radial velocity instrumentation I: absorption gas cells

Peter Plavchan; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Russel J. White; Peter Gao; Cassy L. Davison; Sean M. Mills; C. Beichman; C. Brinkworth; John Asher Johnson; Michael Bottom; David R. Ciardi; K. Wallace; B. Mennesson; K. von Braun; Gautam Vasisht; L. Prato; Stephen R. Kane; Angelle Maria Tanner; Bernie Walp; S. Crawford; S. Lin

We have built and commissioned gas absorption cells for precision spectroscopic radial velocity measurements in the near-infrared in the H and K bands. We describe the construction and installation of three such cells filled with 13CH4, 12CH3D, and 14NH3 for the CSHELL spectrograph at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF). We have obtained their high-resolution laboratory Fourier Transform spectra, which can have other practical uses. We summarize the practical details involved in the construction of the three cells, and the thermal and mechanical control. In all cases, the construction of the cells is very affordable. We are carrying out a pilot survey with the 13CH4 methane gas cell on the CSHELL spectrograph at the IRTF to detect exoplanets around low mass and young stars. We discuss the current status of our survey, with the aim of photon-noise limited radial velocity precision. For adequately bright targets, we are able to probe a noise floor of 7 m/s with the gas cell with CSHELL at cassegrain focus. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of using a gas cell on the next generation of near-infrared spectrographs such as iSHELL on IRTF, iGRINS, and an upgraded NIRSPEC at Keck.


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2015

Precise Near-Infrared Radial Velocities

Peter Plavchan; Peter Gao; Jonathan Gagné; Elise Furlan; Carolyn Brinkworth; Michael Bottom; Angelle Maria Tanner; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Russel J. White; Cassy L. Davison; Sean M. Mills; C. Beichman; John Asher Johnson; David R. Ciardi; K. Wallace; B. Mennesson; Gautam Vasisht; L. Prato; Stephen R. Kane; Sam Crawford; Timothy J. Crawford; Keeyoon Sung; Brian J. Drouin; Sean Lin; Stephanie Leifer; Joe Catanzarite; Todd J. Henry; Kaspar von Braun; Bernie Walp; Claire S. Geneser

We present the results of two 2.3 μm near-infrared (NIR) radial velocity (RV) surveys to detect exoplanets around 36 nearby and young M dwarfs. We use the CSHELL spectrograph ( R ~ 46,000) at the NASA InfraRed Telescope Facility (IRTF), combined with an isotopic methane absorption gas cell for common optical path relative wavelength calibration. We have developed a sophisticated RV forward modeling code that accounts for fringing and other instrumental artifacts present in the spectra. With a spectral grasp of only 5 nm, we are able to reach long-term radial velocity dispersions of ~20–30 m s −1 on our survey targets.


The Astronomical Journal | 2015

A 3D Search for Companions to 12 Nearby M Dwarfs

Cassy L. Davison; Russel J. White; Todd J. Henry; Adric R. Riedel; Wei-Chun Jao; John I. Bailey; Samuel N. Quinn; Justin R. Cantrell; John P. Subasavage; Jen G. Winters


The Astronomical Journal | 2013

The Closest M-dwarf Quadruple System to the Sun

Cassy L. Davison; Russel J. White; Wei-Chun Jao; Todd J. Henry; John I. Bailey; Samuel N. Quinn; Justin R. Cantrell; Adric R. Riedel; John P. Subasavage; Jen G. Winters; Christopher J. Crockett

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Angelle Maria Tanner

Mississippi State University

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David R. Ciardi

California Institute of Technology

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John Asher Johnson

California Institute of Technology

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Peter Gao

California Institute of Technology

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Peter Plavchan

Missouri State University

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Todd J. Henry

Georgia State University

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Guillem Anglada-Escudé

Queen Mary University of London

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Adric R. Riedel

American Museum of Natural History

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