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Dive into the research topics where Keiichi Ohnaka is active.

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Featured researches published by Keiichi Ohnaka.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

AMBER, the near-infrared spectro-interferometric three-telescope VLTI instrument

Romain G. Petrov; F. Malbet; G. Weigelt; P. Antonelli; Udo Beckmann; Y. Bresson; A. Chelli; M. Dugué; G. Duvert; S. Gennari; L. Glück; P. Kern; S. Lagarde; E. Le Coarer; Franco Lisi; F. Millour; K. Perraut; P. Puget; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; Sylvie Robbe-Dubois; A. Roussel; Piero Salinari; E. Tatulli; G. Zins; M. Accardo; B. Acke; K. Agabi; E. Altariba; B. Arezki; E. Aristidi

Context: Optical long-baseline interferometry is moving a crucial step forward with the advent of general-user scientific instruments that equip large aperture and hectometric baseline facilities, such as the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). Aims: AMBER is one of the VLTI instruments that combines up to three beams with low, moderate and high spectral resolutions in order to provide milli-arcsecond spatial resolution for compact astrophysical sources in the near-infrared wavelength domain. Its main specifications are based on three key programs on young stellar objects, active galactic nuclei central regions, masses, and spectra of hot extra-solar planets. Methods: These key science goals led to scientific specifications, which were used to propose and then validate the instrument concept. AMBER uses single-mode fibers to filter the entrance signal and to reach highly accurate, multiaxial three-beam combination, yielding three baselines and a closure phase, three spectral dispersive elements, and specific self-calibration procedures. Results: The AMBER measurements yield spectrally dispersed calibrated visibilities, color-differential complex visibilities, and a closure phase allows astronomers to contemplate rudimentary imaging and highly accurate visibility and phase differential measurements. AMBER was installed in 2004 at the Paranal Observatory. We describe here the present implementation of the instrument in the configuration with which the astronomical community can access it. Conclusions: .After two years of commissioning tests and preliminary observations, AMBER has produced its first refereed publications, allowing assessment of its scientific potential.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Interferometric data reduction with AMBER/VLTI. Principle, estimators, and illustration

E. Tatulli; F. Millour; A. Chelli; G. Duvert; B. Acke; O. Hernandez Utrera; Karl-Heinz Hofmann; Stefan Kraus; Fabien Malbet; P. Mège; Romain G. Petrov; Martin Vannier; G. Zins; P. Antonelli; Udo Beckmann; Y. Bresson; M. Dugué; S. Gennari; L. Glück; P. Kern; S. Lagarde; E. Le Coarer; Franco Lisi; K. Perraut; P. Puget; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; Sylvie Robbe-Dubois; A. Roussel; G. Weigelt; M. Accardo

Aims. In this paper, we present an innovative data reduction method for single-mode interferometry. It has been specifically developed for the AMBER instrument, the three-beam combiner of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer, but it can be derived for any single-mode interferometer. Methods. The algorithm is based on a direct modelling of the fringes in the detector plane. As such, it requires a preliminary calibration of the instrument in order to obtain the calibration matrix that builds the linear relationship between the interferogram and the interferometric observable, which is the complex visibility. Once the calibration procedure has been performed, the signal processing appears to be a classical least-square determination of a linear inverse problem. From the estimated complex visibility, we derive the squared visibility, the closure phase, and the spectral differential phase. Results. The data reduction procedures have been gathered into the so-called amdlib software, now available for the community, and are presented in this paper. Furthermore, each step in this original algorithm is illustrated and discussed from various on-sky observations conducted with the VLTI, with a focus on the control of the data quality and the effective execution of the data reduction procedures. We point out the present limited performances of the instrument due to VLTI instrumental vibrations which are difficult to calibrate.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2009

SiO maser emission in Miras

M. D. Gray; M. Wittkowski; M. Scholz; E. M. L. Humphreys; Keiichi Ohnaka; D. Boboltz

We describe a combined dynamic atmosphere and maser propagation model of SiO maser emission in Mira variables. This model rectifies many of the defects of an earlier model of this type, particularly in relation to the infra-red (IR) radiation field generated by dust and various wavelength-dependent, optically thick layers. Modelled masers form in rings with radii consistent with those found in VLBI observations and with earlier models. This agreement requires the adoption of a radio photosphere of radius approximately twice that of the stellar photosphere, in agreement with observations. A radio photosphere of this size renders invisible certain maser sites with high amplification at low radii, and conceals high-velocity shocks, which are absent in radio continuum observations. The SiO masers are brightest at an optical phase of 0.1 to 0.25, which is consistent with observed phase-lags. Dust can have both mild and profound effects on the maser emission. Maser rings, a shock and the optically thick layer in the SiO pumping band at 8.13µmappear to be closely associated in three out of four phase samples.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Disk and wind interaction in the young stellar object MWC 297 spatially resolved with VLTI/AMBER

Fabien Malbet; M. Benisty; W. J. de Wit; S. Kraus; A. Meilland; F. Millour; E. Tatulli; J.-P. Berger; O. Chesneau; Karl-Heinz Hofmann; Andrea Isella; A. Natta; Romain G. Petrov; Thomas Preibisch; P. Stee; L. Testi; G. Weigelt; P. Antonelli; Udo Beckmann; Y. Bresson; A. Chelli; G. Duvert; L. Glück; P. Kern; S. Lagarde; E. Le Coarer; Franco Lisi; K. Perraut; Sylvie Robbe-Dubois; A. Roussel

The young stellar object MWC 297 is an embedded B1.5Ve star exhibiting strong hydrogen emission lines and a strong near-infrared continuum excess. This object has been observed with the VLT interferometer equipped with the AMBER instrument during its first commissioning run. VLTI/AMBER is currently the only near infrared interferometer which can observe spectrally dispersed visibilities. MWC 297 has been spatially resolved in the continuum with a visibility of


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

DETECTION OF AN INNER GASEOUS COMPONENT IN A HERBIG Be STAR ACCRETION DISK : NEAR-AND MID-INFRARED SPECTROINTERFEROMETRY AND RADIATIVE TRANSFER MODELING OF MWC 147

Stefan Kraus; Thomas Preibisch; Keiichi Ohnaka

0.50^{+0.08}_{-0.10}


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Visual/infrared interferometry of orion trapezium stars : preliminary dynamical orbit and aperture synthesis imaging of the θ1 orionis C system

S. Kraus; Yu. Yu. Balega; J.-P. Berger; K.-H. Hofmann; R. Millan-Gabet; John D. Monnier; Keiichi Ohnaka; Ettore Pedretti; Th. Preibisch; D. Schertl; F. P. Schloerb; Wesley A. Traub; G. Weigelt

as well as in the Brgamma emission line where the visibility decrease to a lower value of


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Imaging the dynamical atmosphere of the red supergiant Betelgeuse in the CO first overtone lines with VLTI/AMBER

Keiichi Ohnaka; G. Weigelt; F. Millour; K.-H. Hofmann; T. Driebe; D. Schertl; A. Chelli; F. Massi; Romain G. Petrov; Ph. Stee

0.33\pm0.06


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Tracing the young massive high-eccentricity binary system

S. Kraus; G. Weigelt; Yu. Yu. Balega; J. A. Docobo; K.-H. Hofmann; Th. Preibisch; D. Schertl; Vakhtang S. Tamazian; T. Driebe; Keiichi Ohnaka; Romain G. Petrov; M. Schöller; M. D. Smith

. This change in the visibility with the wavelength can be interpreted by the presence of an optically thick disk responsible for the visibility in the continuum and of a stellar wind traced by the Brgamma emission line and whose apparent size is 40% larger. We validate this interpretation by building a model of the stellar environment that combines a geometrically thin, optically thick accretion disk model consisting of gas and dust, and a latitude-dependent stellar wind outflowing above the disk surface. The continuum emission and visibilities obtained from this model are fully consistent with the interferometric AMBER data. They agree also with existing optical, near-infrared spectra and other broad-band near-infrared interferometric visibilities. We also reproduce the shape of the visibilities in the Brgamma line as well as the profile of this line obtained at an higher spectral resolution with the VLT/ISAAC spectrograph, and those of the Halpha and Hbeta lines. The disk and wind models yield a consistent inclination of the system of approximately 20 degrees. A picture emerges in which MWC 297 is surrounded by an equatorial flat disk that is possibly still accreting and an outflowing wind which has a much higher velocity in the polar region than at the equator. The VLTI/AMBER unique capability to measure spectral visibilities therefore allows us for the first time to compare the apparent geometry of a wind with the disk structure in a young stellar system.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

\theta^{\mathsf 1}

Markus Wittkowski; D. A. Boboltz; Keiichi Ohnaka; T. Driebe; M. Scholz

Westudythegeometryandthephysicalconditionsintheinner(AU-scale)circumstellarregionaroundtheyoung HerbigBestarMWC147usinglong-baselinespectrointerferometryinthenear-infrared(NIR)K-band,VLTI/AMBER observations, and PTI archive data, as well as the mid-infrared (MIR) N-band, VLTI/MIDI observations. The emission from MWC 147 is clearly resolved and has a characteristic physical size of � 1.3 and � 9 AU at 2.2 and 11 � m, respectively (Gaussian diameter). The MIR emission reveals asymmetry consistent with a disk structure seen under intermediate inclination. The spectrally dispersed AMBER and MIDI interferograms both show a strong increase in the characteristic size toward longer wavelengths, much steeper than predicted by analytic disk models assuming power-law radial temperature distributions. We model the interferometric data and the spectral energy distribution of MWC 147 withtwo-dimensional, frequency-dependent radiationtransfer simulations. Thisanalysis showsthat models of spherical envelopes or passive irradiated Keplerian disks (with vertical or curved puffed-up inner rim) can easily fit the SED, but predict much lower visibilities than observed; the angular size predicted by such models is 2Y4 times larger than the size derived from the interferometric data, so these models can clearly be ruled out. Models of a Keplerian disk with optically thick gas emission from an active gaseous disk (inside the dust sublimation zone), however, yield a good fit of the SED and simultaneously reproduce the absolute level and the spectral dependence of the NIR and MIR visibilities. We conclude that the NIR continuum emission from MWC 147 is dominated by accretion luminosity emerging from an optically thick inner gaseous disk, while the MIR emission also contains contributions from the outer, irradiated dust disk. Subject headingg accretion, accretion disks — stars: formation — stars: individual (MWC 147) — stars: preYmain-sequence — techniques: interferometric


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Orionis C through periastron passage

E. Tatulli; Andrea Isella; A. Natta; L. Testi; A. Marconi; Fabien Malbet; P. Stee; Romain G. Petrov; F. Millour; A. Chelli; G. Duvert; P. Antonelli; Udo Beckmann; Y. Bresson; M. Dugué; S. Gennari; L. Glück; P. Kern; S. Lagarde; E. Le Coarer; Franco Lisi; K. Perraut; P. Puget; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; Sylvie Robbe-Dubois; A. Roussel; G. Weigelt; G. Zins; M. Accardo; B. Acke

Context. Located in the Orion Trapezium cluster, θ^1 Ori C is one of the youngest and nearest high-mass stars (O5-O7) known. Besides its unique properties as a magnetic rotator, the system is also known to be a close binary. Aims. By tracing its orbital motion, we aim to determine the orbit and dynamical mass of the system, yielding a characterization of the individual components and, ultimately, also new constraints for stellar evolution models in the high-mass regime. Furthermore, a dynamical parallax can be derived from the orbit, providing an independent estimate for the distance of the Trapezium cluster. Methods. Using new multi-epoch visual and near-infrared bispectrum speckle interferometric observations obtained at the BTA 6 m telescope, and IOTA near-infrared long-baseline interferometry, we traced the orbital motion of the θ^1 Ori C components over the interval 1997.8 to 2005.9, covering a significant arc of the orbit. Besides fitting the relative position and the flux ratio, we applied aperture synthesis techniques to our IOTA data to reconstruct a model-independent image of the θ^1 Ori C binary system. Results. The orbital solutions suggest a highly eccentricity (e ≈ 0.91) and short-period (P ≈ 10.9 yrs) orbit. As the current astrometric data only allows rather weak constraints on the total dynamical mass, we present the two best-fit orbits. Of these two, the one implying a system mass of 48 M_☉ and a distance of 434 pc to the Trapezium cluster can be favored. When also taking the measured flux ratio and the derived location in the HR-diagram into account, we find good agreement for all observables, assuming a spectral type of O5.5 for θ^1 Ori C1 (M = 34.0 M_☉, T_(eff) = 39 900 K) and O9.5 for C2 (M = 15.5 M_☉, T_(eff) = 31 900 K). Using IOTA, we also obtained first interferometric observations on θ^1 Ori D, finding some evidence for a resolved structure, maybe by a faint, close companion. Conclusions. We find indications that the companion C2 is massive itself, which makes it likely that its contribution to the intense UV radiation field of the Trapezium cluster is non-negligible. Furthermore, the high eccentricity of the preliminary orbit solution predicts a very small physical separation during periastron passage (~1.5 AU, next passage around 2007.5), suggesting strong wind-wind interaction between the two O stars.

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Markus Wittkowski

European Southern Observatory

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Romain G. Petrov

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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F. Millour

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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