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Dive into the research topics where Julian Christopher van Eyken is active.

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Featured researches published by Julian Christopher van Eyken.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2009

The Palomar Transient Factory: System Overview, Performance, and First Results

Nicholas M. Law; S. R. Kulkarni; Richard G. Dekany; Eran O. Ofek; Robert Michael Quimby; Peter E. Nugent; Jason A. Surace; Carl C. Grillmair; Joshua S. Bloom; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Lars Bildsten; Timothy M. Brown; S. Bradley Cenko; David R. Ciardi; Ernest Croner; S. George Djorgovski; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Alexei V. Filippenko; Derek B. Fox; Avishay Gal-Yam; David Hale; Nouhad Hamam; George Helou; John R. Henning; D. Andrew Howell; J. Jacobsen; Russ R. Laher; Sean Mattingly; Dan McKenna; Andrew J. Pickles

The Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) is a fully-automated, wide-field survey aimed at a systematic exploration of the optical transient sky. The transient survey is performed using a new 8.1 square degree camera installed on the 48 inch Samuel Oschin telescope at Palomar Observatory; colors and light curves for detected transients are obtained with the automated Palomar 60 inch telescope. PTF uses 80% of the 1.2 m and 50% of the 1.5 m telescope time. With an exposure of 60 s the survey reaches a depth of m_(g′) ≈ 21.3 and m_R ≈ 20.6 (5σ, median seeing). Four major experiments are planned for the five-year project: (1) a 5 day cadence supernova search; (2) a rapid transient search with cadences between 90 s and 1 day; (3) a search for eclipsing binaries and transiting planets in Orion; and (4) a 3π sr deep H-alpha survey. PTF provides automatic, real-time transient classification and follow-up, as well as a database including every source detected in each frame. This paper summarizes the PTF project, including several months of on-sky performance tests of the new survey camera, the observing plans, and the data reduction strategy. We conclude by detailing the first 51 PTF optical transient detections, found in commissioning data.


The Astronomical Journal | 2011

Characterizing the Variability of Stars with Early-release Kepler Data

David R. Ciardi; Kaspar von Braun; Geoff Bryden; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Steve B. Howell; Stephen R. Kane; Peter Plavchan; Solange V. Ramirez; John R. Stauffer

We present a variability analysis of the early-release first quarter of data publicly released by the Kepler project. Using the stellar parameters from the Kepler Input Catalog, we have separated the sample into 129,000 dwarfs and 17,000 giants and further sub-divided the luminosity classes into temperature bins corresponding approximately to the spectral classes A, F, G, K, and M. Utilizing the inherent sampling and time baseline of the public data set (30 minute sampling and 33.5 day baseline), we have explored the variability of the stellar sample. The overall variability rate of the dwarfs is 25% for the entire sample, but can reach 100% for the brightest groups of stars in the sample. G dwarfs are found to be the most stable with a dispersion floor of σ ~ 0.04 mmag. At the precision of Kepler, >95% of the giant stars are variable with a noise floor of ~0.1 mmag, 0.3 mmag, and 10 mmag for the G giants, K giants, and M giants, respectively. The photometric dispersion of the giants is consistent with acoustic variations of the photosphere; the photometrically derived predicted radial velocity distribution for the K giants is in agreement with the measured radial velocity distribution. We have also briefly explored the variability fraction as a function of data set baseline (1-33 days), at the native 30 minute sampling of the public Kepler data. To within the limitations of the data, we find that the overall variability fractions increase as the data set baseline is increased from 1 day to 33 days, in particular for the most variable stars. The lower mass M dwarf, K dwarf, and G dwarf stars increase their variability more significantly than the higher mass F dwarf and A dwarf stars as the time baseline is increased, indicating that the variability of the lower mass stars is mostly characterized by timescales of weeks while the variability of the higher mass stars is mostly characterized by timescales of days. A study of the distribution of the variability as a function of galactic latitude suggests that sources closer to the galactic plane are more variable. This may be the result of sampling differing populations (i.e., ages) as a function of latitude or may be the result of higher background contamination that is inflating the variability fractions at lower latitudes. A comparison of the M dwarf statistics to the variability of 29 known bright M dwarfs indicates that the M dwarfs are primarily variable on timescales of weeks or longer presumably dominated by spots and binarity. On shorter timescales of hours, which are relevant for planetary transit detection, the stars are significantly less variable, with ~80% having 12 hr dispersions of 0.5 mmag or less.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

The First Extrasolar Planet Discovered with a New-Generation High-Throughput Doppler Instrument

Jian Ge; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Suvrath Mahadevan; Curtis N. DeWitt; Stephen R. Kane; Roger E. Cohen; Andrew Vanden Heuvel; Scott W. Fleming; Pengcheng Guo; Gregory W. Henry; Donald P. Schneider; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Robert A. Wittenmyer; Michael Endl; William D. Cochran; Eric B. Ford; E. L. Martín; G. Israelian; Jeff A. Valenti; D. Montes

We report the detection of the first extrasolar planet, ET-1 (HD 102195b), using the Exoplanet Tracker (ET), a new-generation Doppler instrument. The planet orbits HD 102195, a young star with solar metallicity that may be part of the local association. The planet imparts radial velocity variability to the star with a semiamplitude of 63.4 ± 2.0 m s-1 and a period of 4.11 days. The planetary minimum mass (m sin i) is 0.488MJ ± 0.015MJ. The planet was initially detected in the spring of 2005 with the Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) 0.9 m coude feed telescope. The detection was confirmed by radial velocity observations with the ET at the KPNO 2.1 m telescope and also at the 9 m Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) with its High Resolution Spectrograph. This planetary discovery with a 0.9 m telescope around a V = 8.05 magnitude star was made possible by the high throughput of the instrument: 49% measured from the fiber output to the detector. The ETs interferometer-based approach is an effective method for planet detection. In addition, the ET concept is adaptable to multiple-object Doppler observations or very high precision observations with a cross-dispersed echelle spectrograph to separate stellar fringes over a broad wavelength band. In addition to spectroscopic observations of HD 102195, we obtained brightness measurements with one of the automated photometric telescopes at Fairborn Observatory. Those observations reveal that HD 102195 is a spotted variable star with an amplitude of ~0.015 mag and a 12.3 ± 0.3 day period. This is consistent with spectroscopically observed Ca II H and K emission levels and line-broadening measurements but inconsistent with rotational modulation of surface activity as the cause of the radial velocity variability. Our photometric observations rule out transits of the planetary companion.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

The PTF Orion Project: A Possible Planet Transiting a T-Tauri Star

Julian Christopher van Eyken; David R. Ciardi; Kaspar von Braun; Stephen R. Kane; Peter Plavchan; Chad F. Bender; Timothy M. Brown; Justin R. Crepp; Benjamin J. Fulton; Andrew W. Howard; Steve B. Howell; Suvrath Mahadevan; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Avi Shporer; Paula Szkody; R. L. Akeson; Charles A. Beichman; Andrew F. Boden; Dawn M. Gelino; D. W. Hoard; Solange V. Ramirez; Luisa Marie Rebull; John R. Stauffer; Joshua S. Bloom; S. Bradley Cenko; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. R. Kulkarni; Nicholas M. Law; Peter E. Nugent; Eran O. Ofek

We report observations of a possible young transiting planet orbiting a previously known weak-lined T-Tauri star in the 7–10 Myr old Orion-OB1a/25-Ori region. The candidate was found as part of the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) Orion project. It has a photometric transit period of 0.448413 ± 0.000040 days, and appears in both 2009 and 2010 PTF data. Follow-up low-precision radial velocity (RV) observations and adaptive optics imaging suggest that the star is not an eclipsing binary, and that it is unlikely that a background source is blended with the target and mimicking the observed transit. RV observations with the Hobby–Eberly and Keck telescopes yield an RV that has the same period as the photometric event, but is offset in phase from the transit center by ≈ − 0.22 periods. The amplitude (half range) of the RV variations is 2.4 km s^(−1) and is comparable with the expected RV amplitude that stellar spots could induce. The RV curve is likely dominated by stellar spot modulation and provides an upper limit to the projected companion mass of M_psin i_(orb) ≾4.8 ± 1.2 M_(Jup); when combined with the orbital inclination, i_(orb), of the candidate planet from modeling of the transit light curve, we find an upper limit on the mass of the planetary candidate of M_p ≾5.5 ± 1.4 M_(Jup). This limit implies that the planet is orbiting close to, if not inside, its Roche limiting orbital radius, so that it may be undergoing active mass loss and evaporation.


The Astronomical Journal | 2011

The Palomar Transient Factory Orion Project: Eclipsing Binaries and Young Stellar Objects

Julian Christopher van Eyken; David R. Ciardi; Luisa Marie Rebull; John R. Stauffer; R. L. Akeson; Charles A. Beichman; Andrew F. Boden; Kaspar von Braun; Dawn M. Gelino; D. W. Hoard; Steve B. Howell; Stephen R. Kane; Peter Plavchan; Solange V. Ramirez; Joshua S. Bloom; S. Bradley Cenko; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. R. Kulkarni; Nicholas M. Law; Peter E. Nugent; Eran O. Ofek; Dovi Poznanski; Robert Michael Quimby; Carl J. Grillmair; Russ R. Laher; David Levitan; Sean Mattingly; Jason A. Surace

The Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) Orion project is one of the experiments within the broader PTF survey, a systematic automated exploration of the sky for optical transients. Taking advantage of the wide (3°.5 × 2°.3) field of view available using the PTF camera installed at the Palomar 48 inch telescope, 40 nights were dedicated in 2009 December to 2010 January to perform continuous high-cadence differential photometry on a single field containing the young (7-10 Myr) 25 Ori association. Little is known empirically about the formation of planets at these young ages, and the primary motivation for the project is to search for planets around young stars in this region. The unique data set also provides for much ancillary science. In this first paper, we describe the survey and the data reduction pipeline, and present some initial results from an inspection of the most clearly varying stars relating to two of the ancillary science objectives: detection of eclipsing binaries and young stellar objects. We find 82 new eclipsing binary systems, 9 of which are good candidate 25 Ori or Orion OB1a association members. Of these, two are potential young W UMa type systems. We report on the possible low-mass (M-dwarf primary) eclipsing systems in the sample, which include six of the candidate young systems. Forty-five of the binary systems are close (mainly contact) systems, and one of these shows an orbital period among the shortest known for W UMa binaries, at 0.2156509 ± 0.0000071 days, with flat-bottomed primary eclipses, and a derived distance that appears consistent with membership in the general Orion association. One of the candidate young systems presents an unusual light curve, perhaps representing a semi-detached binary system with an inflated low-mass primary or a star with a warped disk, and may represent an additional young Orion member. Finally, we identify 14 probable new classical T-Tauri stars in our data, along with one previously known (CVSO 35) and one previously reported as a candidate weak-line T-Tauri star (SDSS J052700.12+010136.8).


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2010

THEORY OF DISPERSED FIXED-DELAY INTERFEROMETRY FOR RADIAL VELOCITY EXOPLANET SEARCHES

Julian Christopher van Eyken; Jian Ge; Suvrath Mahadevan

The dispersed fixed-delay interferometer (DFDI) represents a new instrument concept for high-precision radial velocity (RV) surveys for extrasolar planets. A combination of a Michelson interferometer and a medium-resolution spectrograph, it has the potential for performing multi-object surveys, where most previous RV techniques have been limited to observing only one target at a time. Because of the large sample of extrasolar planets needed to better understand planetary formation, evolution, and prevalence, this new technique represents a logical next step in instrumentation for RV extrasolar planet searches, and has been proven with the single-object Exoplanet Tracker (ET) at Kitt Peak National Observatory, and the multi-object W. M. Keck/MARVELS Exoplanet Tracker at Apache Point Observatory. The development of the ET instruments has necessitated fleshing out a detailed understanding of the physical principles of the DFDI technique. Here we summarize the fundamental theoretical material needed to understand the technique and provide an overview of the physics underlying the instruments working. We also derive some useful analytical formulae that can be used to estimate the level of various sources of error generic to the technique, such as photon shot noise when using a fiducial reference spectrum, contamination by secondary spectra (e.g., crowded sources, spectroscopic binaries, or moonlight contamination), residual interferometer comb, and reference cross-talk error. Following this, we show that the use of a traditional gas absorption fiducial reference with a DFDI can incur significant systematic errors that must be taken into account at the precision levels required to detect extrasolar planets.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2009

A new generation multi-object Doppler instrument for the SDSS-III Multi-object APO Radial Velocity Exoplanet Large-area Survey

Jian Ge; Brian Leverett Lee; Nathan De Lee; Xiaoke Wan; John S. de Groot; Bo Zhao; Frank Varosi; Kevin T. Hanna; Suvrath Mahadevan; Fred Hearty; Liang Chang; Jian Liu; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Ji Wang; Rohan Pais; Zhiping Chen; Alaina Shelden; Erin Costello

We report performance of a new generation multi-object Doppler instrument for the on-going Multi-object APO Radial-velocity Exoplanet Large-area Survey (MARVELS) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS-III) program. This instrument is based on dispersed fixed-delay interferomtry design. It consists of a multi-object fiber-feed, a thermally compensated monolithic fixed-delay interferometer, a high throughput spectrograph and a 4kx4k CCD camera. The spectrograph resolving power is R=11,000 and the wavelength coverage is 500-570 nm. The instrument is capable of measuring 60 stars in a single exposure for high to moderate precision radial velocity (3-20 m/s) measurements depending on the star magnitudes (V=7.6-12). The instrument was commissioned at the SDSS telescope in September 2008 and used to collect science data starting in October 2008. Observations of reference stars show that the measured photon noise limiting errors are consistent with the prediction for most of the measurements.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

FOLLOW-UP OBSERVATIONS OF PTFO 8-8695: A 3 MYR OLD T TAURI STAR HOSTING A JUPITER-MASS PLANETARY CANDIDATE

David R. Ciardi; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Jason W. Barnes; Charles A. Beichman; Sean J. Carey; Christopher J. Crockett; Jason D. Eastman; Christopher M. Johns-Krull; Steve B. Howell; Stephen R. Kane; Jacob N. McLane; Peter Plavchan; L. Prato; John R. Stauffer; Gerard T. van Belle; Kaspar von Braun

We present Spitzer 4.5 μm light curve observations, Keck NIRSPEC radial velocity observations, and LCOGT optical light curve observations of PTFO 8-8695, which may host a Jupiter-sized planet in a very short orbital period (0.45 days). Previous work by van Eyken et al. and Barnes et al. predicts that the stellar rotation axis and the planetary orbital plane should precess with a period of 300–600 days. As a consequence, the observed transits should change shape and depth, disappear, and reappear with the precession. Our observations indicate the long-term presence of the transit events (>3 years), and that the transits indeed do change depth, disappear and reappear. The Spitzer observations and the NIRSPEC radial velocity observations (with contemporaneous LCOGT optical light curve data) are consistent with the predicted transit times and depths for the M⋆=0.34 M⊙ precession model and demonstrate the disappearance of the transits. An LCOGT optical light curve shows that the transits do reappear approximately 1 year later. The observed transits occur at the times predicted by a straight-forward propagation of the transit ephemeris. The precession model correctly predicts the depth and time of the Spitzer transit and the lack of a transit at the time of the NIRSPEC radial velocity observations. However, the precession model predicts the return of the transits approximately 1 month later than observed by LCOGT. Overall, the data are suggestive that the planetary interpretation of the observed transit events may indeed be correct, but the precession model and data are currently insufficient to confirm firmly the planetary status of PTFO 8-8695b.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2012

Aperture Photometry Tool Versus SExtractor for Noncrowded Fields

Russ R. Laher; Luisa Marie Rebull; Varoujan Gorjian; Frank J. Masci; John W. Fowler; Carl J. Grillmair; Jason A. Surace; Sean Mattingly; Ed Jackson; Eugean Hacopeans; Nouhad Hamam; Steve Groom; Harry I. Teplitz; Wei Mi; George Helou; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Nicholas M. Law; Richard G. Dekany; Gustavo Rahmer; David Hale; Roger Smith; Robert Michael Quimby; Eran O. Ofek; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Jeff Zolkower; Viswa Velur; Richard Walters; John R. Henning; Khahn Bui; Dan McKenna

Outputs from new software program Aperture Photometry Tool (APT) are compared with similar outputs from SExtractor for sources extracted from R-band optical images acquired by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF), infrared mosaics constructed from Spitzer Space Telescope images, and a processed visible/near-infrared image from the Hubble Legacy Archive (HLA). Two large samples from the PTF images are studied, each containing around 3 × 10^3 sources from noncrowded fields. The median values of source-intensity relative percentage differences between the two software programs, computed separately for two PTF samples, are +0.13% and +0.17%, with corresponding statistical dispersions of 1.43% and 1.84%, respectively. For the Spitzer mosaics, a similar large sample of extracted sources for each of channels 1–4 of Spitzer’s Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) are analyzed with two different sky annulus sizes, and we find that the median and modal values of source-intensity relative percentage differences between the two software programs are between -0.5% and +2.0%, and the corresponding statistical dispersions range from 1.4 to 6.7%, depending on the Spitzer IRAC channel and sky annulus. The results for the HLA image are mixed, as might be expected for a moderately crowded field. The comparisons for the three different kinds of images show that there is generally excellent agreement between APT and SExtractor. Differences in source-intensity uncertainty estimates for the PTF images amount to less than 3% for the PTF sources, and these are potentially caused by SExtractor’s omission of the sky background uncertainty term in the formula for source-intensity uncertainty, as well as differing methods of sky background estimation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

MEASURING STELLAR RADIAL VELOCITIES WITH A DISPERSED FIXED-DELAY INTERFEROMETER

Suvrath Mahadevan; Julian Christopher van Eyken; Jian Ge; Curtis N. DeWitt; Scott W. Fleming; Roger E. Cohen; Justin R. Crepp; Andrew Vanden Heuvel

We demonstrate the ability to measure precise stellar barycentric radial velocities with the dispersed fixed-delay interferometer technique using the Exoplanet Tracker (ET), an instrument primarily designed for precision differential Doppler velocity measurements using this technique. Our barycentric radial velocities, derived from observations taken at the KPNO 2.1 m telescope, differ from those of Nidever et al. by 0.047 km s−1 (rms) when simultaneous iodine calibration is used, and by 0.120 km s−1 (rms) without simultaneous iodine calibration. Our results effectively show that a Michelson interferometer coupled to a spectrograph allows precise measurements of barycentric radial velocities even at a modest spectral resolution of R ~ 5100. A multiobject version of the ET instrument capable of observing ~500 stars per night is being used at the Sloan 2.5 m telescope at Apache Point Observatory for the Multiobject APO Radial Velocity Exoplanet Large-area Survey (MARVELS), a wide-field radial velocity survey for extrasolar planets around TYCHO-2 stars in the magnitude range 7.6 < V < 12. In addition to precise differential velocities, this survey will also yield precise barycentric radial velocities for many thousands of stars using the data analysis techniques reported here. Such a large kinematic survey at high velocity precision will be useful in identifying the signature of accretion events in the Milky Way and understanding local stellar kinematics, in addition to discovering exoplanets, brown dwarfs, and spectroscopic binaries.

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Jian Li Ge

Pennsylvania State University

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Sankaran Mahadevan

Pennsylvania State University

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Scott W. Fleming

Computer Sciences Corporation

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David R. Ciardi

California Institute of Technology

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