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Featured researches published by H. J. Walker.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

STRUCTURE IN THE e ERIDANI DEBRIS DISK

J. S. Greaves; Wayne S. Holland; Mark C. Wyatt; W. R. F. Dent; E. I. Robson; I. M. Coulson; T. Jenness; Gerald H. Moriarty-Schieven; G. R. Davis; Harold M. Butner; Walter Kieran Gear; C. Dominik; H. J. Walker

New submillimeter images have been obtained of the dust disk around the nearby K2 V star e Eridani, with the total data set now spanning 5 yr. These images show the distribution of dusty debris generated by comet collisions, reflecting clearing and perturbations by planets, and may give insights to early conditions in the solar system. The structure seen around e Eri at 850 mm and published in 1998 is confirmed in the new observations, and the same structure is also seen in an image obtained for the first time at 450 mm. The disk is inclined by ≈25 to the sky plane, with emission peaking at 65 AU, a 105 AU radius outer edge, and an inner cavity fainter by a factor of ≈2. The structure within the dust ring suggests perturbations by a planet orbiting at tens of AU, and long-term tracking of these features will constrain its mass and location. A preliminary analysis shows that two clumps and one arc appear to follow the stellar motion (i.e., are not background objects) and have tentative evidence of counterclockwise rotation of ∼1 yr 1 . Within the ring, the mass of colliding comets is estimated at 5–9 M, similar to the primordial Kuiper Belt, and so any inner terrestrial planets may be undergoing an epoch of heavy bombardment. Subject headings: circumstellar matter — planetary systems: formation — stars: individual (e Eridani)


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

First results of Herschel-PACS observations of Neptune

E. Lellouch; Paul Hartogh; Helmut Feuchtgruber; B. Vandenbussche; T. de Graauw; R. Moreno; C. Jarchow; T. Cavalié; Glenn S. Orton; M. Banaszkiewicz; M. I. Blecka; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Jacques Crovisier; Thérèse Encrenaz; T. Fulton; M. Küppers; L. M. Lara; Dariusz C. Lis; Alexander S. Medvedev; Miriam Rengel; Hideo Sagawa; B. M. Swinyard; S. Szutowicz; F. Bensch; Edwin A. Bergin; F. Billebaud; N. Biver; Geoffrey A. Blake; J. A. D. L. Blommaert; J. Cernicharo

We report on the initial analysis of a Herschel-PACS full range spectrum of Neptune, covering the 51–220 μm range with a mean resolving power of ~3000, and complemented by a dedicated observation of CH_4 at 120 μm. Numerous spectral features due to HD (R(0) and R(1)), H_(2)O, CH_4, and CO are present, but so far no new species have been found. Our results indicate that (i) Neptunes mean thermal profile is warmer by ~3 K than inferred from the Voyager radio-occultation; (ii) the D/H mixing ratio is (4.5 ± 1) × 10^(-5), confirming the enrichment of Neptune in deuterium over the protosolar value (~2.1 × 10^(-5)); (iii) the CH_4 mixing ratio in the mid stratosphere is (1.5 ± 0.2) × 10^(-3), and CH_4 appears to decrease in the lower stratosphere at a rate consistent with local saturation, in agreement with the scenario of CH_4 stratospheric injection from Neptunes warm south polar region; (iv) the H_(2)O stratospheric column is (2.1 ± 0.5) × 10^(14) cm^(-2) but its vertical distribution is still to be determined, so the H_(2)O external flux remains uncertain by over an order of magnitude; and (v) the CO stratospheric abundance is about twice the tropospheric value, confirming the dual origin of CO suspected from ground-based millimeter/submillimeter observations.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Gas in the protoplanetary disc of HD 169142: Herschel's view

G. Meeus; Christophe Pinte; Peter Woitke; B. Montesinos; I. Mendigutia; Pablo Riviere-Marichalar; C. Eiroa; Geoffrey S. Mathews; B. Vandenbussche; Christian D. Howard; Aki Roberge; G. Sandell; Gaspard Duchene; Francois Menard; C. A. Grady; William R. F. Dent; Inga Kamp; J.-C. Augereau; W. F. Thi; I. Tilling; J. M. Alacid; Sean M. Andrews; D. R. Ardila; G. Aresu; D. Barrado; Sean David Brittain; David R. Ciardi; W. C. Danchi; D. Fedele; I. de Gregorio-Monsalvo

In an effort to simultaneously study the gas and dust components of the disc surrounding the young Herbig Ae star HD 169142, we present far-IR observations obtained with the PACS instrument onboard the Herschel Space Observatory. This work is part of the open time key program GASPS, which is aimed at studying the evolution of protoplanetary discs. To constrain the gas properties in the outer disc, we observed the star at several key gas-lines, including [OI] 63.2 and 145.5 mu m, [CII] 157.7 mu m, CO 72.8 and 90.2 mu m, and o-H2O 78.7 and 179.5 mu m. We only detect the [OI] 63.2 mu m line in our spectra, and derive upper limits for the other lines. We complement our data set with PACS photometry and (CO)-C-12/13 data obtained with the Submillimeter Array. Furthermore, we derive accurate stellar parameters from optical spectra and UV to mm photometry. We model the dust continuum with the 3D radiative transfer code MCFOST and use this model as an input to analyse the gas lines with the thermo-chemical code ProDIMo. Our dataset is consistent with a simple model in which the gas and dust are well-mixed in a disc with a continuous structure between 20 and 200 AU, but this is not a unique solution. Our modelling effort allows us to constrain the gas-to-dust mass ratio as well as the relative abundance of the PAHs in the disc by simultaneously fitting the lines of several species that originate in different regions. Our results are inconsistent with a gas-poor disc with a large UV excess; a gas mass of 5.0 +/- 2.0 x 10(-3) M-circle dot is still present in this disc, in agreement with earlier CO observations.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

The Herschel view of GAS in Protoplanetary Systems (GASPS). First comparisons with a large grid of models

Christophe Pinte; Peter Woitke; Francois Menard; Gaspard Duchene; Inga Kamp; G. Meeus; Geoffrey S. Mathews; Christian D. Howard; C. A. Grady; W. F. Thi; I. Tilling; J.-C. Augereau; William R. F. Dent; J. M. Alacid; Sean M. Andrews; D. R. Ardila; G. Aresu; D. Barrado; Sean David Brittain; David R. Ciardi; W. C. Danchi; C. Eiroa; D. Fedele; I. de Gregorio-Monsalvo; A. M. Heras; N. Huélamo; Alexander V. Krivov; J. Lebreton; R. Liseau; C. Martin-Zaidi

The Herschel GASPS key program is a survey of the gas phase of protoplanetary discs, targeting 240 objects which cover a large range of ages, spectral types, and disc properties. To interpret this large quantity of data and initiate self-consistent analyses of the gas and dust properties of protoplanetary discs, we have combined the capabilities of the radiative transfer code MCFOST with the gas thermal balance and chemistry code ProDiMo to compute a grid of ≈300 000 disc models (DENT). We present a comparison of the first Herschel/GASPS line and continuum data with the predictions from the DENT grid of models. Our objective is to test some of the main trends already identified in the DENT grid, as well as to define better empirical diagnostics to estimate the total gas mass of protoplanetary discs. Photospheric UV radiation appears to be the dominant gas-heating mechanism for Herbig stars, whereas UV excess and/or X-rays emission dominates for T Tauri stars. The DENT grid reveals the complexity in the analysis of far-IR lines and the difficulty to invert these observations into physical quantities. The combination of Herschel line observations with continuum data and/or with rotational lines in the (sub-)millimetre regime, in particular CO lines, is required for a detailed characterisation of the physical and chemical properties of circumstellar discs.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2002

Infrared spectral classification of normal stars

A. M. Heras; Russell F. Shipman; Stephan D. Price; Th. de Graauw; H. J. Walker; M. Jourdain de Muizon; M.F. Kessler; T. Prusti; L.K.E. Decin; B. Vanderbussche; L. B. F. M. Waters

Moderate resolution (400) 2.38-45.2m infrared spectra of stars without dust features were obtained with the Short Wavelength Spectrometer (SWS) on board the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). The observations are part of a larger program with the objective to extend and refine the current infrared classification schemes. In particular, our data provide the basis for a more detailed classification of the 1.N-1.NO sources (ordinary and oxygen rich naked stars) as defined by Kraemer et al. (2002) in a comprehensive classification of the ISO-SWS spectra. For our analysis, the continuum was determined by fitting Engelkes function (Engelke 1992) to the SWS data. The stellar angular diameters derived from these estimates of the continuum are in good agreement with values obtained by other methods. Analysis of the equivalent widths of the CO fundamental and first overtone molecular bands, the SiO fundamental and first overtone, as well as the H2O bending mode band as a function of MK class, reveals that there is sucient information in the SWS spectra to distinguish between hot (B, A, F) and cool stars. Furthermore, it is possible to determine the spectral type for the G, K and M giants, and subtype ranges in a sequence of K and M giants. The equivalent widths of the CO and SiO bands are found to be well correlated in K and M stars, such that the equivalent widths of the CO fundamental, the SiO first overtone and the SiO fundamental can be reasonably well extrapolated from the depth of the CO first overtone. We have identified two stars, HR 365 and V Nor, whose mid-infrared spectrum does not correspond to their respective optical classification. HR 365 may have a late M companion, which dominates the observed infrared spectrum while V Nor is a late type giant that was included because its spectrum was classified as featureless under the IRAS LRS scheme. According to Kraemer et al. (2002), V Nor has a thin dust shell, which distorts the analysis of its mid-infrared absorption bands.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Herschel detects oxygen in the beta Pictoris debris disk

Alexis Brandeker; Gianni Cataldi; G. Olofsson; B. Vandenbussche; B. Acke; M. J. Barlow; J. A. D. L. Blommaert; Martin Cohen; W. R. F. Dent; C. Dominik; J. Di Francesco; M Fridlund; Walter Kieran Gear; Adrian M. Glauser; J. S. Greaves; Paul M. Harvey; A. M. Heras; M. R. Hogerheijde; Wayne S. Holland; R. Huygen; R. J. Ivison; S. J. Leeks; T. Lim; R. Liseau; Brenda C. Matthews; E. Pantin; G. L. Pilbratt; P. Royer; B. Sibthorpe; Christoffel Waelkens

The young star β Pictoris is well known for its dusty debris disk produced through collisional grinding of planetesimals, kilometre-sized bodies in orbit around the star. In addition to dust, small amounts of gas are also known to orbit the star; this gas is likely the result of vaporisation of violently colliding dust grains. The disk is seen edge on and from previous absorption spectroscopy we know that the gas is very rich in carbon relative to other elements. The oxygen content has been more difficult to assess, however, with early estimates finding very little oxygen in the gas at a C/O ratio that is 20× higher than the cosmic value. A C/O ratio that high is difficult to explain and would have far-reaching consequences for planet formation. Here we report on observations by the far-infrared space telescope Herschel, using PACS, of emission lines from ionised carbon and neutral oxygen. The detected emission from C+ is consistent withthat previously reported observed by the HIFI instrument on Herschel, while the emission from O is hard to explain without assuming a higher density region in the disk, perhaps in the shape of a clump or a dense torus required to sufficiently excite the O atoms. A possible scenario is that the C/O gas is produced by the same process responsible for the CO clump recently observed by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array in the disk and that the redistribution of the gas takes longer than previously assumed. A more detailed estimate of the C/O ratio and the mass of O will have to await better constraints on the C/O gas spatial distribution.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

The β Pictoris disk imaged by Herschel PACS and SPIRE

B. Vandenbussche; B. Sibthorpe; B. Acke; E. Pantin; G. Olofsson; C. Waelkens; C. Dominik; M. J. Barlow; J. A. D. L. Blommaert; Jeroen Bouwman; Alexis Brandeker; Martin Cohen; W. De Meester; W. R. F. Dent; Katrina Exter; J. Di Francesco; M. Fridlund; Walter Kieran Gear; Adrian M. Glauser; Haley Louise Gomez; J. S. Greaves; Peter Charles Hargrave; Paul M. Harvey; Th. Henning; A. M. Heras; M. R. Hogerheijde; Wayne S. Holland; R. Huygen; R. J. Ivison; C. Jean

We obtained Herschel PACS and SPIRE images of the thermal emission of the debris disk around the A5V star beta Pic. The disk is well resolved in the PACS filters at 70, 100, and 160 mu m. The surface brightness profiles between 70 and 160 mu m show no significant asymmetries along the disk, and are compatible with 90% of the emission between 70 and 160 mu m originating in a region closer than 200 AU to the star. Although only marginally resolving the debris disk, the maps obtained in the SPIRE 250-500 mu m filters provide full-disk photometry, completing the SED over a few octaves in wavelength that had been previously inaccessible. The small far-infrared spectral index (beta = 0.34) indicates that the grain size distribution in the inner disk (<200 AU) is inconsistent with a local collisional equilibrium. The size distribution is either modified by non-equilibrium effects, or exhibits a wavy pattern, caused by an under-abundance of impactors which have been removed by radiation pressure.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

The Herschel-SPIRE submillimetre spectrum of Mars

B. M. Swinyard; Paul Hartogh; S. Sidher; T. Fulton; E. Lellouch; C. Jarchow; Matthew Joseph Griffin; R. Moreno; Hideo Sagawa; G. Portyankina; M. I. Blecka; M. Banaszkiewicz; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Jacques Crovisier; Th. Encrenaz; M. Kueppers; L. M. Lara; Dariusz C. Lis; Alexander S. Medvedev; Miriam Rengel; S. Szutowicz; B. Vandenbussche; Frank Bensch; Edwin A. Bergin; F. Billebaud; N. Biver; Geoffrey A. Blake; Joris Blommaert; M. de Val-Borro; J. Cernicharo

We have obtained the first continuous disk averaged spectrum of Mars from 450 to 1550 Ghz using the Herschel-SPIRE Fourier-transform spectrometer. The spectrum was obtained at a constant resolution of 1.4 GHz across the whole band. The flux from the planet is such that the instrument was operated in “bright source” mode to prevent saturation of the detectors. This was the first successful use of this mode and in this work we describe the method used for observing Mars together with a detailed discussion of the data reduction techniques required to calibrate the spectrum. We discuss the calibration accuracy obtained and describe the first comparison with surface and atmospheric models. In addition to a direct photometric measurement of the planet the spectrum contains the characteristic transitions of 12 CO from J 5‐4 to J 13‐12 as well as numerous H2O transitions. Together these allow the comparison to global atmospheric models allowing the mean mixing ratios of water and 12 CO to be investigated. We find that it is possible to match the observed depth of the absorption features in the spectrum with a fixed water mixing ratio of 1 × 10 −4 and a 12 CO mixing ratio of 9 × 10 −4 .


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2002

ISOPHOT far-infrared photometry of NGC 3079

Ulrich Klaas; H. J. Walker

FIR photometry (from 15m to 200m) of NGC 3079 which is resolved by ISOPHOT at 60 mi s presented. With the assumption of an unresolved core plus an extended disk component, good consistency with IRAS and SCUBA data is found. The SED of the total flux between 60m and the submm can be modelled by the superposition of three dust components with temperatures of 32 K, 20 K and 12 K. The emission of the extended disk component is 1/3 of the unresolved core compo- nent in the 60-180m range, from 200m onwards its relative contribution increases. The resulting dust mass of 3:8 10 7 M is consistent with a total gas-to-dust mass ratio of 200, close to the canonical value found for the Milky Way. These results demonstrate an appropriate way to disentangle and characterize the main dust components by combining ISOPHOT FIR data from the ISO Data Archive with submm data from SCUBA.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel images of NGC 6720: H-2 formation on dust grains

P. A. M. van Hoof; G. C. Van de Steene; M. J. Barlow; Katrina Exter; B. Sibthorpe; Toshiya Ueta; V. Peris; Martin A. T. Groenewegen; J. A. D. L. Blommaert; Martin Cohen; W. De Meester; Gary J. Ferland; Walter Kieran Gear; Haley Louise Gomez; Peter Charles Hargrave; E. Huygen; R. J. Ivison; C. Jean; S. J. Leeks; T. Lim; G. Olofsson; E. T. Polehampton; S. Regibo; P. Royer; B. M. Swinyard; B. Vandenbussche; H. Van Winckel; C. Waelkens; H. J. Walker; R. Wesson

Herschel PACS and SPIRE images have been obtained of NGC 6720 (the Ring nebula). This is an evolved planetary nebula with a central star that is currently on the cooling track, due to which the outer parts of the nebula are recombining. From the PACS and SPIRE images we conclude that there is a striking resemblance between the dust distribution and the H2 emission, which appears to be observational evidence that H2 forms on grain surfaces. We have developed a photoionization model of the nebula with the Cloudy code which we used to determine the physical conditions of the dust and investigate possible formation scenarios for the H2. We conclude that the most plausible scenario is that the H2 resides in high density knots which were formed after the recombination of the gas started when the central star entered the cooling track. Hydrodynamical instabilities due to the unusually low temperature of the recombining gas are proposed as a mechanism for forming the knots. H2 formation in the knots is expected to be substantial after the central star underwent a strong drop in luminosity about one to two thousand years ago, and may still be ongoing at this moment, depending on the density of the knots and the properties of the grains in the knots.

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B. Vandenbussche

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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J. A. D. L. Blommaert

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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M. J. Barlow

University College London

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A. M. Heras

European Space Research and Technology Centre

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Martin Cohen

University of California

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B. M. Swinyard

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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B. Acke

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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C. Waelkens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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