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Dive into the research topics where Dylan P. Morgan is active.

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Featured researches published by Dylan P. Morgan.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

LIGHT CURVE TEMPLATES AND GALACTIC DISTRIBUTION OF RR LYRAE STARS FROM SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY STRIPE 82

Branimir Sesar; Željko Ivezić; Skyler H. Grammer; Dylan P. Morgan; Andrew Cameron Becker; Mario Juric; Nathan De Lee; James Annis; Timothy C. Beers; Xiaohui Fan; Robert H. Lupton; James E. Gunn; Gillian R. Knapp; Linhua Jiang; Sebastian Jester; David E. Johnston; Hubert Lampeitl

We present an improved analysis of halo substructure traced by RR Lyrae stars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) stripe 82 region. With the addition of SDSS-II data, a revised selection method based on new ugriz light curve templates results in a sample of 483 RR Lyrae stars that is essentially free of contamination. The main result from our first study persists: the spatial distribution of halo stars at galactocentric distances 5-100 kpc is highly inhomogeneous. At least 20% of halo stars within 30 kpc from the Galactic center can be statistically associated with substructure. We present strong direct evidence, based on both RR Lyrae stars and main-sequence stars, that the halo stellar number density profile significantly steepens beyond a Galactocentric distance of ~30 kpc, and a larger fraction of the stars are associated with substructure. By using a novel method that simultaneously combines data for RR Lyrae and main-sequence stars, and using photometric metallicity estimates for main-sequence stars derived from deep co-added u-band data, we measure the metallicity of the Sagittarius dSph tidal stream (trailing arm) toward R.A. ~2h-3h and decl. ~ 0? to be 0.3 dex higher ([Fe/H] = ?1.2) than that of surrounding halo field stars. Together with a similar result for another major halo substructure, the Monoceros stream, these results support theoretical predictions that an early forming, smooth inner halo, is metal-poor compared to high surface brightness material that have been accreted onto a later-forming outer halo. The mean metallicity of stars in the outer halo that are not associated with detectable clumps may still be more metal-poor than the bulk of inner-halo stars, as has been argued from other data sets.


The Astronomical Journal | 2011

EXPLORING THE VARIABLE SKY WITH LINEAR. I. PHOTOMETRIC RECALIBRATION WITH THE SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY

Branimir Sesar; J. Scott Stuart; Željko Ivezić; Dylan P. Morgan; Andrew Cameron Becker; P. R. Woźniak

We describe photometric recalibration of data obtained by the asteroid survey LINEAR. Although LINEAR was designed for astrometric discovery of moving objects, the data set described here contains over 5 billion photometric measurements for about 25 million objects, mostly stars. We use Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data from the overlapping ~10,000 deg^2 of sky to recalibrate LINEAR photometry and achieve errors of 0.03 mag for sources not limited by photon statistics with errors of 0.2 mag at r ~ 18. With its 200 observations per object on average, LINEAR data provide time domain information for the brightest four magnitudes of the SDSS survey. At the same time, LINEAR extends the deepest similar wide-area variability survey, the Northern Sky Variability Survey, by 3 mag. We briefly discuss the properties of about 7000 visually confirmed periodic variables, dominated by roughly equal fractions of RR Lyrae stars and eclipsing binary stars, and analyze their distribution in optical and infrared color-color diagrams. The LINEAR data set is publicly available from the SkyDOT Web site.


The Astronomical Journal | 2012

THE EFFECTS OF CLOSE COMPANIONS (AND ROTATION) ON THE MAGNETIC ACTIVITY OF M DWARFS

Dylan P. Morgan; Andrew A. West; Ane Garcés; S. Catalán; Saurav Dhital; Miriam Fuchs; Nicole M. Silvestri

We present a study of close white dwarf and M dwarf (WD+dM) binary systems and examine the effect that a close companion has on the magnetic field generation in M dwarfs. We use a base sample of 1602 white dwarf main-sequence binaries from Rebassa-Mansergas et al. to develop a set of color cuts in GALEX, SDSS, UKIDSS, and 2MASS color space. Then using the SDSS Data Release 8 spectroscopic database, we construct a sample of 1756 WD+dM high-quality pairs from our color cuts and previous catalogs. We separate the individual WD and dM from each spectrum using an iterative technique that compares the WD and dM components to best-fit templates. Using the absolute height above the Galactic plane as a proxy for age, and the Hα emission line as an indicator for magnetic activity, we investigate the age-activity relation for our sample for spectral types ≤ M7. Our results show that early-type M dwarfs (≤M4) in close binary systems are more likely to be active and have longer activity lifetimes compared to their field counterparts. However, at a spectral type of M5 (just past the onset of full convection in M dwarfs), the activity fraction and lifetimes of WD+dM binary systems become more comparable to that of the field M dwarfs. One of the implications of having a close binary companion is presumed to be increased stellar rotation through disk disruption, tidal effects, or angular momentum exchange. Thus, we interpret the similarity in activity behavior between late-type dMs in WD+dM pairs and late-type field dMs to be due to a decrease in sensitivity in close binary companions (or stellar rotation), which has implications for the nature of magnetic activity in fully convective stars. Using the WD components of the pairs, we find WD cooling ages to use as an additional constraint on the age-activity relation for our sample. We find that, on average, active early-type dMs tend to be younger and that active late-type dMs span a much broader age regime making them indistinguishable from the inactive late-type population. We also show that magnetic strength, as measured by Hα, is comparable between paired and field M dwarfs until a spectral type of M6/M7 where M dwarf activity for stars with close companions becomes much stronger. In addition, we present 37 very close candidate pairs with fast-moving orbits that display radial velocity changes over hour timescales.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

USING CLOSE WHITE DWARF + M DWARF STELLAR PAIRS TO CONSTRAIN THE FLARE RATES IN CLOSE STELLAR BINARIES

Dylan P. Morgan; Andrew A. West; Andrew Cameron Becker

We present a study of the statistical flare rates of M dwarfs (dMs) with close white dwarf (WD) companions (WD+dM; typical separations < 1 au). Our previous analysis demonstrated that dMs with close WD companions are more magnetically active than their field counterparts. One likely implication of having a close binary companion is increased stellar rotation through disk-disruption, tidal effects, and/or angular momentum exchange; increased stellar rotation has long been associated with an increase in stellar activity. Previous studies show a strong correlation between dMs that are magnetically active (showing H{\alpha} in emission) and the frequency of stellar flare rates. We examine the difference between the flare rates observed in close WD+dM binary systems and field dMs. Our sample consists of a subset of 181 close WD+dM pairs from Morgan et al. (2012) observed in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82, where we obtain multi-epoch observations in the Sloan ugriz-bands. We find an increase in the overall flaring fraction in the close WD+dM pairs (0.09


The Astronomical Journal | 2017

Activity and Kinematics of White Dwarf-M Dwarf Binaries from the SUPERBLINK Proper Motion Survey

Julie N. Skinner; Dylan P. Morgan; Andrew A. West; Sebastien Lepine; John R. Thorstensen

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The Astronomical Journal | 2011

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 Spectroscopic M Dwarf Catalog. I. Data

Andrew A. West; Dylan P. Morgan; John J. Bochanski; Jan Marie Andersen; Keaton J. Bell; Adam F. Kowalski; James R. A. Davenport; Suzanne L. Hawley; Sarah J. Schmidt; David Bernat; Eric J. Hilton; Philip S. Muirhead; Kevin R. Covey; Bárbara Rojas-Ayala; Everett Schlawin; Mary Gooding; Kyle Schluns; Saurav Dhital; J. Sebastian Pineda; David O. Jones

0.03%) compared to the field dMs (0.0108


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2010

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 M Dwarf Spectroscopic Catalog

Andrew A. West; Dylan P. Morgan; John J. Bochanski; Jan Marie Andersen; Keaton J. Bell; Adam F. Kowalski; James R. A. Davenport; Suzanne L. Hawley; Sarah J. Schmidt; David Bernat; Eric J. Hilton; Philip S. Muirhead; Kevin R. Covey; Bárbara Rojas-Ayala; Everett Schlawin; Mary Gooding; Kyle Schluns; Saurav Dhital; J. Sebastian Pineda; David O. Jones

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Archive | 2011

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey DR7 Spectroscopic M Dwarf Catalog I: Data

Andrew A. West; Dylan P. Morgan; John J. Bochanski; Jan Marie Andersen; Keaton J. Bell; Adam F. Kowalski; James R. A. Davenport; Suzanne L. Hawley; Sarah J. Schmidt; David Bernat; Eric J. Hilton; Philip S. Muirhead; Kevin R. Covey; Bárbara Rojas-Ayala; Everett Schlawin; Mary Gooding; Kyle Schluns; Saurav Dhital; J. Sebastian Pineda; David O. Jones

0.0007%; Kowalski et al. 2009) and a lower flaring fraction for active WD+dMs (0.05


Archive | 2011

The Effect of Close Companions on the Magnetic Activity of M Dwarfs

Dylan P. Morgan; Andrew A. West; Nicole M. Silvestri

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American Astronomical Society | 2011

THE SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY DATA RELEASE 7 SPECTROSCOPIC M DWARF CATALOG. I. DATA

Andrew A. West; Dylan P. Morgan; John J. Bochanski; Jan Marie Andersen; Keaton J. Bell; Adam F. Kowalski; James R. A. Davenport; Suzanne L. Hawley; Sarah J. Schmidt; David Bernat; Eric J. Hilton; Philip S. Muirhead; Kevin R. Covey; Everett Schlawin; Mary Gooding; Kyle Schluns; Saurav Dhital; J. Sebastian Pineda; David O. Jones; Bárbara Rojas-Ayala

0.03%) compared to active dMs (0.28

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Adam F. Kowalski

University of Colorado Boulder

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Eric J. Hilton

University of Washington

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J. Sebastian Pineda

California Institute of Technology

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James R. A. Davenport

Western Washington University

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