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Featured researches published by Jeffrey K. Chilcote.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

First light of the Gemini Planet Imager

Bruce A. Macintosh; James R. Graham; Patrick Ingraham; Quinn Konopacky; Christian Marois; Marshall D. Perrin; Lisa A. Poyneer; Brian J. Bauman; Travis Barman; Adam Burrows; Andrew Cardwell; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Robert J. De Rosa; Daren Dillon; René Doyon; Jennifer Dunn; Darren Erikson; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Donald Gavel; Stephen J. Goodsell; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Paul Kalas; James E. Larkin; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis; Mark S. Marley; James McBride; Max Millar-Blanchaer; Katie M. Morzinski

Bruce Macintosh a , James R. Graham , Patrick Ingraham b , Quinn Konopacky , Christian Marois , Marshall Perrin f , Lisa Poyneer a , Brian Bauman a , Travis Barman , Adam Burrows , Andrew Cardwell , Jeffrey Chilcote j , Robert J. De Rosa , Daren Dillon , Rene Doyon , Jennifer Dunn e , Darren Erikson e , Michael Fitzgerald j , Donald Gavel l , Stephen Goodsell i , Markus Hartung i , Pascale Hibon i , Paul G. Kalas c , James Larkin j , Jerome Maire d , Franck Marchis , Mark Marley , James McBride c , Max Millar-Blanchaer d , Katie Morzinski , Andew Norton l B. R. Oppenheimer , Dave Palmer a , Jennifer Patience k , Laurent Pueyo f , Fredrik Rantakyro i , Naru Sadakuni i , Leslie Saddlemyer e , Dmitry Savransky , Andrew Serio i , Remi Soummer f Anand Sivaramakrishnan f , q Inseok Song , Sandrine Thomas , J. Kent Wallace , Sloane Wiktorowicz l , and Schuyler Wolff vSignificance Direct detection—spatially resolving the light of a planet from the light of its parent star—is an important technique for characterizing exoplanets. It allows observations of giant exoplanets in locations like those in our solar system, inaccessible by other methods. The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a new instrument for the Gemini South telescope. Designed and optimized only for high-contrast imaging, it incorporates advanced adaptive optics, diffraction control, a near-infrared spectrograph, and an imaging polarimeter. During first-light scientific observations in November 2013, GPI achieved contrast performance that is an order of magnitude better than conventional adaptive optics imagers. The Gemini Planet Imager is a dedicated facility for directly imaging and spectroscopically characterizing extrasolar planets. It combines a very high-order adaptive optics system, a diffraction-suppressing coronagraph, and an integral field spectrograph with low spectral resolution but high spatial resolution. Every aspect of the Gemini Planet Imager has been tuned for maximum sensitivity to faint planets near bright stars. During first-light observations, we achieved an estimated H band Strehl ratio of 0.89 and a 5-σ contrast of 106 at 0.75 arcseconds and 105 at 0.35 arcseconds. Observations of Beta Pictoris clearly detect the planet, Beta Pictoris b, in a single 60-s exposure with minimal postprocessing. Beta Pictoris b is observed at a separation of 434 ± 6 milliarcseconds (mas) and position angle 211.8 ± 0.5°. Fitting the Keplerian orbit of Beta Pic b using the new position together with previous astrometry gives a factor of 3 improvement in most parameters over previous solutions. The planet orbits at a semimajor axis of 9.0−0.4+0.8 AU near the 3:2 resonance with the previously known 6-AU asteroidal belt and is aligned with the inner warped disk. The observations give a 4% probability of a transit of the planet in late 2017.


Science | 2015

Discovery and spectroscopy of the young jovian planet 51 Eri b with the Gemini Planet Imager

Bruce A. Macintosh; James R. Graham; Travis Barman; R. J. De Rosa; Quinn Konopacky; Mark S. Marley; Christian Marois; Eric L. Nielsen; Laurent Pueyo; Abhijith Rajan; Julien Rameau; Didier Saumon; Jason J. Wang; Jenny Patience; Mark Ammons; Pauline Arriaga; Étienne Artigau; Steven V. W. Beckwith; J. Brewster; Sebastian Bruzzone; Joanna Bulger; B. Burningham; Adam Burrows; C. H. Chen; Eugene Chiang; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Rebekah I. Dawson; Ruobing Dong; René Doyon; Zachary H. Draper

An exoplanet extracted from the bright Direct imaging of Jupiter-like exoplanets around young stars provides a glimpse into how our solar system formed. The brightness of young stars requires the use of next-generation devices such as the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI). Using the GPI, Macintosh et al. discovered a Jupiter-like planet orbiting a young star, 51 Eridani (see the Perspective by Mawet). The planet, 51 Eri b, has a methane signature and is probably the smallest exoplanet that has been directly imaged. These findings open the door to understanding solar system origins and herald the dawn of a new era in next-generation planetary imaging. Science, this issue p. 64; see also p. 39 The Gemini Planet Imager detects a Jupiter-like exoplanet orbiting the young star 51 Eridani. [Also see Perspective by Mawet] Directly detecting thermal emission from young extrasolar planets allows measurement of their atmospheric compositions and luminosities, which are influenced by their formation mechanisms. Using the Gemini Planet Imager, we discovered a planet orbiting the ~20-million-year-old star 51 Eridani at a projected separation of 13 astronomical units. Near-infrared observations show a spectrum with strong methane and water-vapor absorption. Modeling of the spectra and photometry yields a luminosity (normalized by the luminosity of the Sun) of 1.6 to 4.0 × 10−6 and an effective temperature of 600 to 750 kelvin. For this age and luminosity, “hot-start” formation models indicate a mass twice that of Jupiter. This planet also has a sufficiently low luminosity to be consistent with the “cold-start” core-accretion process that may have formed Jupiter.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Gemini Planet Imager observational calibrations I: Overview of the GPI data reduction pipeline

Marshall D. Perrin; Jérôme Maire; Patrick Ingraham; Dmitry Savransky; Max Millar-Blanchaer; Schuyler Wolff; Jean Baptiste Ruffio; Jason J. Wang; Zachary H. Draper; Naru Sadakuni; Christian Marois; Abhijith Rajan; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Bruce A. Macintosh; James R. Graham; René Doyon; James E. Larkin; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Stephen J. Goodsell; David Palmer; Kathleen Labrie; Mathilde Beaulieu; Robert J. De Rosa; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Quinn Konopacky; David Lafrenière; Jean-Francois Lavigne; Franck Marchis

The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) has as its science instrument an infrared integral field spectrograph/polarimeter (IFS). Integral field spectrographs are scientificially powerful but require sophisticated data reduction systems. For GPI to achieve its scientific goals of exoplanet and disk characterization, IFS data must be reconstructed into high quality astrometrically and photometrically accurate datacubes in both spectral and polarization modes, via flexible software that is usable by the broad Gemini community. The data reduction pipeline developed by the GPI instrument team to meet these needs is now publicly available following GPI’s commissioning. This paper, the first of a series, provides a broad overview of GPI data reduction, summarizes key steps, and presents the overall software framework and implementation. Subsequent papers describe in more detail the algorithms necessary for calibrating GPI data. The GPI data reduction pipeline is open source, available from planetimager.org, and will continue to be enhanced throughout the life of the instrument. It implements an extensive suite of task primitives that can be assembled into reduction recipes to produce calibrated datasets ready for scientific analysis. Angular, spectral, and polarimetric differential imaging are supported. Graphical tools automate the production and editing of recipes, an integrated calibration database manages reference files, and an interactive data viewer customized for high contrast imaging allows for exploration and manipulation of data.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

β PICTORIS' INNER DISK in POLARIZED LIGHT and NEW ORBITAL PARAMETERS for β PICTORIS b

Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer; James R. Graham; Laurent Pueyo; Paul Kalas; Rebekah I. Dawson; Jason J. Wang; Marshall D. Perrin; Dae Sik Moon; Bruce A. Macintosh; S. Mark Ammons; Travis Barman; Andrew Cardwell; C. H. Chen; Eugene Chiang; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; Robert J. De Rosa; Zachary H. Draper; Jennifer Dunn; Gaspard Duchene; Thomas M. Esposito; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; Stephen J. Goodsell; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Sasha Hinkley; Patrick Ingraham; Rebecca Jensen-Clem

© 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. We present H-band observations of β Pic with the Gemini Planet Imagers (GPIs) polarimetry mode that reveal the debris disk between ∼0.″3 (6 AU) and ∼1.″7 (33 AU), while simultaneously detecting β Pic b. The polarized disk image was fit with a dust density model combined with a Henyey-Greenstein scattering phase function. The best-fit model indicates a disk inclined to the line of sight () with a position angle (PA) (slightly offset from the main outer disk, ), that extends from an inner disk radius of to well outside GPIs field of view. In addition, we present an updated orbit for β Pic b based on new astrometric measurements taken in GPIs spectroscopic mode spanning 14 months. The planet has a semimajor axis of , with an eccentricity The PA of the ascending node is offset from both the outer main disk and the inner disk seen in the GPI image. The orbital fit constrains the stellar mass of β Pic to Dynamical sculpting by β Pic b cannot easily account for the following three aspects of the inferred disk properties: (1) the modeled inner radius of the disk is farther out than expected if caused by β Pic b; (2) the mutual inclination of the inner disk and β Pic b is when it is expected to be closer to zero; and (3) the aspect ratio of the disk () is larger than expected from interactions with β Pic b or self-stirring by the disks parent bodies.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The integral field spectrograph for the Gemini planet imager

James E. Larkin; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Theodore Aliado; Brian J. Bauman; George Brims; John Canfield; Andrew Cardwell; Daren Dillon; René Doyon; Jennifer Dunn; Michael P. Fitzgerald; James R. Graham; Stephen J. Goodsell; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Patrick Ingraham; Christopher A. Johnson; Evan Kress; Quinn Konopacky; Bruce A. Macintosh; Kenneth G. Magnone; Jérôme Maire; Ian S. McLean; David Palmer; Marshall D. Perrin; Carlos Quiroz; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; Naru Sadakuni; Leslie Saddlemyer; Andrew Serio

The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a complex optical system designed to directly detect the self-emission of young planets within two arcseconds of their host stars. After suppressing the starlight with an advanced AO system and apodized coronagraph, the dominant residual contamination in the focal plane are speckles from the atmosphere and optical surfaces. Since speckles are diffractive in nature their positions in the field are strongly wavelength dependent, while an actual companion planet will remain at fixed separation. By comparing multiple images at different wavelengths taken simultaneously, we can freeze the speckle pattern and extract the planet light adding an order of magnitude of contrast. To achieve a bandpass of 20%, sufficient to perform speckle suppression, and to observe the entire two arcsecond field of view at diffraction limited sampling, we designed and built an integral field spectrograph with extremely low wavefront error and almost no chromatic aberration. The spectrograph is fully cryogenic and operates in the wavelength range 1 to 2.4 microns with five selectable filters. A prism is used to produce a spectral resolution of 45 in the primary detection band and maintain high throughput. Based on the OSIRIS spectrograph at Keck, we selected to use a lenslet-based spectrograph to achieve an rms wavefront error of approximately 25 nm. Over 36,000 spectra are taken simultaneously and reassembled into image cubes that have roughly 192x192 spatial elements and contain between 11 and 20 spectral channels. The primary dispersion prism can be replaced with a Wollaston prism for dual polarization measurements. The spectrograph also has a pupil-viewing mode for alignment and calibration.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Performance of the integral field spectrograph for the Gemini Planet Imager

Jeffrey K. Chilcote; James E. Larkin; Jérôme Maire; Marshall D. Perrin; Michael P. Fitzgerald; René Doyon; Simon Thibault; Brian J. Bauman; Bruce A. Macintosh; James R. Graham; Les Saddlemyer

We present performance results, from in-lab testing, of the Integral Field Spectrograph (IFS) for the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI). GPI is a facility class instrument for the Gemini Observatory with the primary goal of directly detecting young Jovian planets. The GPI IFS is based on concepts from the OSIRIS instrument at Keck and utilizes an infrared transmissive lenslet array to sample a rectangular 2.8 x 2.8 arcsecond field of view. The IFS provides low-resolution spectra across five bands between 1 and 2.5μm. Alternatively, the dispersing element can be replaced with a Wollaston prism to provide broadband polarimetry across the same five filter bands. The IFS construction was based at the University of California, Los Angeles in collaboration with the Université de Montr eal, Immervision and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. During its construction, we encountered an unusual noise source from microphonic pickup by the Hawaii-2RG detector. We describe this noise and how we eliminated it through vibration isolation. The IFS has passed its preship review and was shipped to University of California, Santa Cruz at the end of 2011 for integration with the remaining sub-systems of GPI. The IFS has been integrated with the rest of GPI and is delivering high quality spectral datacubes of GPIs coronagraphic field.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Gemini planet imager observational calibrations V: Astrometry and distortion

Quinn Konopacky; Sandrine Thomas; Bruce A. Macintosh; Daren Dillon; Naru Sadakuni; Jérôme Maire; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Sasha Hinkley; Paul Kalas; Thomas M. Esposito; Christian Marois; Patrick Ingraham; Franck Marchis; Marshall D. Perrin; James R. Graham; Jason J. Wang; Robert J. De Rosa; Katie M. Morzinski; Laurent Pueyo; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; James E. Larkin; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Stephen J. Goodsell; Ben R. Oppenheimer; Jenny Patience; Leslie Saddlemyer; Anand Sivaramakrishnan

We present the results of both laboratory and on sky astrometric characterization of the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI). This characterization includes measurement of the pixel scale* of the integral field spectrograph (IFS), the position of the detector with respect to north, and optical distortion. Two of these three quantities (pixel scale and distortion) were measured in the laboratory using two transparent grids of spots, one with a square pattern and the other with a random pattern. The pixel scale in the laboratory was also estimate using small movements of the artificial star unit (ASU) in the GPI adaptive optics system. On sky, the pixel scale and the north angle are determined using a number of known binary or multiple systems and Solar System objects, a subsample of which had concurrent measurements at Keck Observatory. Our current estimate of the GPI pixel scale is 14.14 ± 0.01 millarcseconds/pixel, and the north angle is -1.00 ± 0.03°. Distortion is shown to be small, with an average positional residual of 0.26 pixels over the field of view, and is corrected using a 5th order polynomial. We also present results from Monte Carlo simulations of the GPI Exoplanet Survey (GPIES) assuming GPI achieves ~1 milliarcsecond relative astrometric precision. We find that with this precision, we will be able to constrain the eccentricities of all detected planets, and possibly determine the underlying eccentricity distribution of widely separated Jovians.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

THE ORBIT and TRANSIT PROSPECTS for β PICTORIS b CONSTRAINED with ONE MILLIARCSECOND ASTROMETRY

Jason J. Wang; James R. Graham; Laurent Pueyo; Paul Kalas; Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer; Jean Baptiste Ruffio; Robert J. De Rosa; S. Mark Ammons; Pauline Arriaga; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Joanna Bulger; Adam Burrows; Andrew Cardwell; C. H. Chen; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; René Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Li Wei Hung; Patrick Ingraham; Quinn Konopacky; James E. Larkin; Bruce A. Macintosh; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis

Gemini Observatory; National Science Foundation [NSF AST-1518332]; NASA [NNX15AC89G, NNX15AD95G]; U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

SPECTROSCOPIC CHARACTERIZATION OF HD 95086 b WITH THE GEMINI PLANET IMAGER

Robert J. De Rosa; Julien Rameau; Jenny Patience; James R. Graham; René Doyon; David Lafrenière; Bruce A. Macintosh; Laurent Pueyo; Abhijith Rajan; Jason J. Wang; Kimberly Ward-Duong; Li Wei Hung; Jérôme Maire; Eric L. Nielsen; S. Mark Ammons; Joanna Bulger; Andrew Cardwell; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Ramon Galvez; Benjamin L. Gerard; Stephen J. Goodsell; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Patrick Ingraham; Mara Johnson-Groh; Paul Kalas; Quinn Konopacky; Franck Marchis; Christian Marois; Stanimir Metchev

We present new


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

On-sky performance during verification and commissioning of the Gemini Planet Imager's adaptive optics system

Lisa A. Poyneer; Robert J. De Rosa; Bruce A. Macintosh; David Palmer; Marshall D. Perrin; Naru Sadakuni; Dmitry Savransky; Brian J. Bauman; Andrew Cardwell; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Daren Dillon; Donald Gavel; Stephen J. Goodsell; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; Sandrine Thomas; Jean-Pierre Véran

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Pascale Hibon

European Southern Observatory

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René Doyon

Université de Montréal

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Jason J. Wang

University of California

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