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Dive into the research topics where David Mouillet is active.

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Featured researches published by David Mouillet.


Science | 2010

A Giant Planet Imaged in the Disk of the Young Star β Pictoris

A.-M. Lagrange; M. Bonnefoy; G. Chauvin; Daniel Apai; D. Ehrenreich; A. Boccaletti; Damien Gratadour; D. Rouan; David Mouillet; Sylvestre Lacour; M. Kasper

Planet Is Born The 10-million-year-old star β Pictoris, has long been suspected to host a planet. Through images obtained with the Very Large Telescope, an array of four telescopes located in Chile, Lagrange et al. (p. 57, published online 10 June) now confirm the presence of a young, giant planet, β Pictoris b, orbiting within the dusty disk that surrounds the star. β Pictoris b orbits closer to its star than Uranus and Neptune do to the Sun in our solar system. This orbital separation is consistent with the in situ formation of the planet via a core accretion mechanism. Thus, giant planets can form within a stellar dust disk in only a few million years. The Very Large Telescope reveals that a huge planet formed within a star’s dusty disk in a few million years. Here, we show that the ~10-million-year-old β Pictoris system hosts a massive giant planet, β Pictoris b, located 8 to 15 astronomical units from the star. This result confirms that gas giant planets form rapidly within disks and validates the use of disk structures as fingerprints of embedded planets. Among the few planets already imaged, β Pictoris b is the closest to its parent star. Its short period could allow for recording of the full orbit within 17 years.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2004

A Giant Planet Candidate near a Young Brown Dwarf ? Direct VLT/NACO Observations using IR Wavefront Sensing

G. Chauvin; A.-M. Lagrange; Christophe Dumas; B. Zuckerman; David Mouillet; Inseok Song; J.-L. Beuzit; Patrick J. Lowrance

We present deep VLT/NACO infrared imaging and spectroscopic observations of the brown dwarf 2MASSWJ 1207334−393254, obtained during our on-going adaptive optics survey of southern young, nearby associations. This ∼25 MJup brown dwarf, located ∼70 pc from Earth, has been recently identified as a member of the TW Hydrae Association (age ∼ 8 Myr). Using adaptive optics infrared wavefront sensing to acquire sharp images of its circumstellar environment, we discovered a very faint and very red object at a close separation of ∼780 mas (∼55 AU). Photometry in the H, Ks and Lbands and upper limit in J-band are compatible with a spectral type L5−L9.5. Near-infrared spectroscopy is consistent with this spec- tral type estimate. Different evolutionary models predict an object within the planetary regime with a mass of M = 5 ± 2 MJup and an effective temperature of Teff = 1250 ± 200 K.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

NAOS, the first AO system of the VLT: on-sky performance

Gerard Rousset; Francois Lacombe; Pascal Puget; Norbert Hubin; Eric Gendron; Thierry Fusco; Robin Arsenault; Julien Charton; Philippe Feautrier; Pierre Gigan; P. Kern; Anne-Marie Lagrange; Pierre-Yves Madec; David Mouillet; Didier Rabaud; Patrick Rabou; Eric Stadler; G. Zins

NAOS is the first adaptive optics system installed at the VLT 8m telescopes. It was designed, manufactured and tested by a french Consortium under an ESO contract, to provide compensated images to the high angular resolution IR spectro-imaging camera (CONICA) in the 1 to 5 μm spectral range. It is equipped with a 185 actuator deformable mirror, a tip/tilt mirror and two wavefront sensors, one in the visible and one in the near IR spectral range. It has been installed in November at the Nasmyth focus B of the VLT UT4. During the first light run in December 2001, NAOS has delivered a Strehl ratio of 50 under average seeing conditions for bright guide stars. The diffraction limit of the telescope has been achieved at 2.2 μm. The closed loop operation has been very robust under bad seeing conditions. It was also possible to obtain a substantial correction with mV=17.6 and mK=13.1 reference stars. The on-sky acceptance tests of NAOS-CONICA were completed in May 2002 and the instrument will be made available to the European astronomical community in October by ESO. This paper describes the system and present the on-sky performance in terms of Strehl ratio, seeing conditions and guide star magnitude.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 1997

A planet on an inclined orbit as an explanation of the warp in the β Pictoris disc

David Mouillet; John D. Larwood; J. C. B. Papaloizou; Anne-Marie Lagrange

We consider the deformation that has recently been observed in the inner part of the circumstellar disc around f3 Pictoris with the HST. Our recent ground-based, adaptive optics coronographic observations confirm that the inner disc is warped. We investigate the hypothesis that a yet undetected planet is responsible for the observed warp, through simulations of the effect of the gravitational perturbation resulting from a massive companion on the disc. The physical processes assumed in the simulations are discussed: since the observed particles do not survive collisions, the apparent disc shape is driven by the underlying collisionless parent population. The resulting possible parameters for the planet that are consistent with the observed disc deformation are reviewed.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

Giant planet companion to 2MASSW J1207334-393254

G. Chauvin; Anne-Marie Lagrange; Christophe Dumas; Ben Zuckerman; David Mouillet; Inseok Song; J.-L. Beuzit; Patrick James Lowrance

We report new VLT/NACO imaging observations of the young, nearby brown dwarf 2MASSW J1207334-393254 and its suggested planetary mass companion (2M1207 b). Three epochs of VLT/NACO measurements obtained over nearly one year show that the planetary mass companion candidate shares the same proper motion and, with a high confidence level, is not a stationary background object. This result confirms the status of 2M1207 b as of planetary mass (5 times the mass of Jupiter) and the first image of a planetary mass companion in a different system than our own. This discovery offers new perspectives for our understanding of chemical and physical properties of planetary mass objects as well as their mechanisms of formation.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

NAOS-CONICA first on sky results in a variety of observing modes

Rainer Lenzen; Markus Hartung; Wolfgang Brandner; Gert Finger; Norbert Hubin; Francois Lacombe; Anne-Marie Lagrange; Matthew D. Lehnert; Alan F. M. Moorwood; David Mouillet

The Adaptive Optics NIR Instrument NAOS-CONICA has been commissioned at the VLT (UT4) between November 2001 and March 2002. After summarizing the observational capabilities of this multimode instrument in combination with the powerful AO-system, we will present first on sky results of the instrumental performance for several non-direct imaging modes: High spatial resolution slit-spectroscopy in the optical and thermal NIR region has been tested. For compact sources below 2 arcsec extension, Wollaston prism polarimetry is used. For larger objects the linear polarization pattern can be analyzed by wire grids down to the diffraction limit. Coronographic masks are applied to optimize imaging and polarimetric capabilities. The cryogenic Fabry-Perot Interferometer in combination with an 8m-telescope AO-system is shown to be a powerful tool for imaging spectroscopy (3D-scans).


Optics Express | 2006

High-order adaptive optics requirements for direct detection of extrasolar planets: Application to the SPHERE instrument

T. Fusco; Gerard Rousset; Jean-François Sauvage; Cyril Petit; Jean-Luc Beuzit; Kjetil Dohlen; David Mouillet; Julien Charton; M. Nicolle; M. Kasper; Pierre Baudoz; Pascal Puget

The detection of extrasolar planets implies an extremely high-contrast, long-exposure imaging capability at near infrared and probably visible wavelengths. We present here the core of any Planet Finder instrument, that is, the extreme adaptive optics (XAO) subsystem. The level of AO correction directly impacts the exposure time required for planet detection. In addition, the capacity of the AO system to calibrate all the instrument static defects ultimately limits detectivity. Hence, the extreme AO system has to adjust for the perturbations induced by the atmospheric turbulence, as well as for the internal aberrations of the instrument itself. We propose a feasibility study for an extreme AO system in the frame of the SPHERE (Spectro-Polarimetry High-contrast Exoplanet Research) instrument, which is currently under design and should equip one of the four VLT 8-m telescopes in 2010.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Photometric characterization of exoplanets using angular and spectral differential imaging

A. Vigan; Claire Moutou; M. Langlois; F. Allard; A. Boccaletti; M. Carbillet; David Mouillet; Ian F. C. Smith

In recent years, there has been intensive research into the direct detection of exoplanets. Data obtained in the future with high-contrast imaging instruments, optimized for the direct detection of giant planets, may be strongly limited by speckle noise. Specific observing strategies and data analysis methods, such as angular and spectral differential imaging, are required to attenuate the noise level and possibly to detect the flux of faint planets. Even though these methods are very efficient at suppressing the speckles, the photometry of faint planets is dominated by the speckle residuals. The determination of the effective temperature and surface gravity of the detected planets from photometric measurements in different bands is then limited by the photometric error on the planet flux. In this paper, we investigate this photometric error and the consequences on the determination of the physical parameters of the detected planets. We perform detailed end-to-end simulation with the CAOS-based software package for spectro-polarimetric high-contrast exoplanet research (SPHERE) to obtain realistic data representing typical observing sequences in the Y, J, H and K s bands with a high-contrast imager. The simulated data are used to measure the photometric accuracy as a function of contrast for planets detected with angular and spectral+angular differential methods. We apply this empirical accuracy to study the characterization capabilities of a high-contrast differential imager. We show that the expected photometric performances will allow the detection and characterization of exoplanets down to a Jupiter mass at angular separations of 1.0 and 0.2 arcsec, respectively, around high-mass and low-mass stars with two observations in different filter pairs. We also show that the determination of the physical parameters of the planets from photometric measurements in different filter pairs is essentially limited by the error on the determination of the surface gravity.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Asymmetric features in the protoplanetary disk MWC 758

M. Benisty; A. Juhász; A. Boccaletti; H. Avenhaus; J. Milli; C. Thalmann; C. Dominik; P. Pinilla; Esther Buenzli; A. Pohl; J.-L. Beuzit; T. Birnstiel; J. de Boer; M. Bonnefoy; G. Chauvin; Valentin Christiaens; A. Garufi; C. A. Grady; T. Henning; N. Huélamo; Andrea Isella; M. Langlois; Francois Menard; David Mouillet; J. Olofsson; E. Pantin; Christophe Pinte; Laurent Pueyo

Context. The study of dynamical processes in protoplanetary disks is essential to understand planet formation. In this context, transition disks are prime targets because they are at an advanced stage of disk clearing and may harbor direct signatures of disk evolution. Aims. We aim to derive new constraints on the structure of the transition disk MWC 758, to detect non-axisymmetric features and understand their origin. Methods. We obtained infrared polarized intensity observations of the protoplanetary disk MWC 758 with SPHERE/VLT at 1.04 m to resolve scattered light at a smaller inner working angle (0.093 00 ) and a higher angular resolution (0.027 00 ) than previously achieved. Results. We observe polarized scattered light within 0.53 00 (148 au) down to the inner working angle (26 au) and detect distinct nonaxisymmetric features but no fully depleted cavity. The two small-scale spiral features that were previously detected with HiCIAO are resolved more clearly, and new features are identified, including two that are located at previously inaccessible radii close to the star. We present a model based on the spiral density wave theory with two planetary companions in circular orbits. The best model requires a high disk aspect ratio (H=r 0.20 at the planet locations) to account for the large pitch angles which implies a very warm disk. Conclusions. Our observations reveal the complex morphology of the disk MWC 758. To understand the origin of the detected features, the combination of high-resolution observations in the submillimeter with ALMA and detailed modeling is needed.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

HST/NICMOS2 coronagraphic observations of the circumstellar environment of three old PMS stars: HD 100546, SAO 206462 and MWC 480

J. C. Augereau; Anne-Marie Lagrange; David Mouillet; F. Ménard

The close environment of four old Pre-Main Sequence stars has been observed thanks to the coronagraphic mode of the HST/NICMOS2 camera at

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J.-L. Beuzit

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. Vigan

Aix-Marseille University

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G. Chauvin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A.-M. Lagrange

Joseph Fourier University

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M. Langlois

Aix-Marseille University

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Anne-Marie Lagrange

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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