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Dive into the research topics where Megan Ansdell is active.

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Featured researches published by Megan Ansdell.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Spectro-thermometry of M Dwarfs and Their Candidate Planets: Too Hot, Too Cool, or Just Right?

Andrew W. Mann; Eric Gaidos; Megan Ansdell

We use moderate-resolution spectra of nearby late K and M dwarf stars with parallaxes and interferometrically determined radii to refine their effective temperatures, luminosities, and metallicities. We use these revised values to calibrate spectroscopic techniques to infer the fundamental parameters of more distant late-type dwarf stars. We demonstrate that, after masking out poorly modeled regions, the newest version of the PHOENIX atmosphere models accurately reproduce temperatures derived bolometrically. We apply methods to late-type hosts of transiting planet candidates in the Kepler field, and calculate effective temperature, radius, mass, and luminosity with typical errors of 57?K, 7%, 11%, and 13%, respectively. We find systematic offsets between our values and those from previous analyses of the same stars, which we attribute to differences in atmospheric models utilized for each study. We investigate which of the planets in this sample are likely to orbit in the circumstellar habitable zone. We determine that four candidate planets (KOI 854.01, 1298.02, 1686.01, and 2992.01) are inside of or within 1? of a conservative definition of the habitable zone, but that several planets identified by previous analyses are not (e.g., KOI 1422.02 and KOI 2626.01). Only one of the four habitable-zone planets is Earth sized, suggesting a downward revision in the occurrence of such planets around M dwarfs. These findings highlight the importance of measuring accurate stellar parameters when deriving parameters of their orbiting planets.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Trumpeting M dwarfs with CONCH-SHELL: a catalogue of nearby cool host-stars for habitable exoplanets and life

Eric Gaidos; Andrew W. Mann; Sebastien Lepine; Andrea P. Buccino; D. J. James; Megan Ansdell; R. Petrucci; Pablo J. D. Mauas; E. J. Hilton

We present an all-sky catalog of 2970 nearby (d . 50 pc), bright (J < 9) M- or late Ktype dwarf stars, 86% of which have been confirmed by spectroscopy. This catalog will be useful for searches for Earth-size and possibly Earth-like planets by future spacebased transit missions and ground-based infrared Doppler radial velocity surveys. Stars were selected from the SUPERBLINK proper motion catalog according to absolute magnitudes, spectra, or a combination of reduced proper motions and photometric colors. From our spectra we determined gravity-sensitive indices, and identified and removed 0.2% of these as interloping hotter or evolved stars. Thirteen percent of the stars exhibit Hα emission, an indication of stellar magnetic activity and possible youth. The mean metallicity is [Fe/H] = -0.07 with a standard deviation of 0.22 dex, similar to nearby solar-type stars. We determined stellar effective temperatures by least-squares fitting of spectra to model predictions calibrated by fits to stars with established bolometric temperatures, and estimated radii, luminosities, and masses using empirical relations. Six percent of stars with images from integral field spectra are resolved doubles. We inferred the planet population around M dwarfs using Kepler data and applied this to our catalog to predict detections by future exoplanet surveys.


The Astronomical Journal | 2014

PROSPECTING IN ULTRACOOL DWARFS: MEASURING THE METALLICITIES OF MID- AND LATE-M DWARFS

Andrew W. Mann; Niall R. Deacon; Eric Gaidos; Megan Ansdell; John M. Brewer; Michael C. Liu; E. A. Magnier; Kimberly M. Aller

Metallicity is a fundamental parameter that contributes to the physical characteristics of a star. The low temperatures and complex molecules present in M dwarf atmospheres make it difficult to measure their metallicities using techniques that have been commonly used for Sun-like stars. Although there has been significant progress in developing empirical methods to measure M dwarf metallicities over the last few years, these techniques have been developed primarily for early- to mid-M dwarfs. We present a method to measure the metallicity of mid- to late-M dwarfs from moderate resolution (R ~ 2000) K-band ( 2.2 μm) spectra. We calibrate our formula using 44 wide binaries containing an F, G, K, or early-M primary of known metallicity and a mid- to late-M dwarf companion. We show that similar features and techniques used for early-M dwarfs are still effective for late-M dwarfs. Our revised calibration is accurate to ~0.07 dex for M4.5-M9.5 dwarfs with –0.58 < [Fe/H] < +0.56 and shows no systematic trends with spectral type, metallicity, or the method used to determine the primary star metallicity. We show that our method gives consistent metallicities for the components of M+M wide binaries. We verify that our new formula works for unresolved binaries by combining spectra of single stars. Lastly, we show that our calibration gives consistent metallicities with the Mann et al. study for overlapping (M4-M5) stars, establishing that the two calibrations can be used in combination to determine metallicities across the entire M dwarf sequence.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

Zodiacal Exoplanets in Time (Zeit) Iii: A Short-Period Planet Orbiting a Pre-Main-Sequence Star in the Upper Scorpius Ob Association

Andrew W. Mann; Elisabeth R. Newton; Aaron C. Rizzuto; J. Irwin; Gregory A. Feiden; Eric Gaidos; Gregory N. Mace; Adam L. Kraus; D. J. James; Megan Ansdell; David Charbonneau; Kevin R. Covey; Michael J. Ireland; Daniel T. Jaffe; Marshall C. Johnson; Benjamin Kidder; Andrew Vanderburg

We confirm and characterize a close-in (


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Main-belt Comet P/2012?T1 (PANSTARRS)

Henry H. Hsieh; Heather M. Kaluna; Bojan Novaković; Bin Yang; Nader Haghighipour; Marco Micheli; Larry Denneau; A. Fitzsimmons; Robert Jedicke; Jan Kleyna; Peter Vereš; R. J. Wainscoat; Megan Ansdell; Garrett T. Elliott; Jacqueline V. Keane; Karen J. Meech; Nicholas A. Moskovitz; T. E. Riesen; Scott S. Sheppard; Sarah M. Sonnett; David J. Tholen; Laurie Urban; Nick Kaiser; K. C. Chambers; W. S. Burgett; E. A. Magnier; Jeffrey S. Morgan; Paul A. Price

P_{\rm{orb}}


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

Dippers and Dusty Disks Edges: A Unified Model

Eva H. L. Bodman; Alice C. Quillen; Megan Ansdell; Michael Hippke; Tabetha S. Boyajian; Eric E. Mamajek; Eric G. Blackman; Aaron C. Rizzuto; Joel H. Kastner

= 5.425 days), super-Neptune sized (


The Astronomical Journal | 2017

ZODIACAL EXOPLANETS IN TIME (ZEIT). IV. SEVEN TRANSITING PLANETS IN THE PRAESEPE CLUSTER

Andrew W. Mann; Eric Gaidos; Andrew Vanderburg; Aaron C. Rizzuto; Megan Ansdell; Jennifer Medina; Gregory N. Mace; Adam L. Kraus; Kimberly R. Sokal

5.04^{+0.34}_{-0.37}


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

The Mysterious Dimmings of the T Tauri Star V1334 Tau

Joseph E. Rodriguez; George Zhou; Phillip A. Cargile; Daniel J. Stevens; H. P. Osborn; B. J. Shappee; Phillip A. Reed; Michael B. Lund; Howard Relles; David W. Latham; Jason D. Eastman; Keivan G. Stassun; Allyson Bieryla; Gilbert A. Esquerdo; Perry L. Berlind; Michael L. Calkins; Andrew Vanderburg; Eric Gaidos; Megan Ansdell; Robert J. Siverd; Thomas G. Beatty; Christopher S. Kochanek; Joshua Pepper; B. Scott Gaudi; Richard G. West; Don Pollacco; D. J. James; Rudolf B. Kuhn; Krzysztof Zbigniew Stanek; T. W.-S. Holoien

Earth radii) planet transiting K2-33 (2MASS J16101473-1919095), a late-type (M3) pre-main sequence (11 Myr-old) star in the Upper Scorpius subgroup of the Scorpius-Centaurus OB association. The host star has the kinematics of a member of the Upper Scorpius OB association, and its spectrum contains lithium absorption, an unambiguous sign of youth (<20 Myr) in late-type dwarfs. We combine photometry from K2 and the ground-based MEarth project to refine the planets properties and constrain the host stars density. We determine \names bolometric flux and effective temperature from moderate resolution spectra. By utilizing isochrones that include the effects of magnetic fields, we derive a precise radius (6-7%) and mass (16%) for the host star, and a stellar age consistent with the established value for Upper Scorpius. Follow-up high-resolution imaging and Doppler spectroscopy confirm that the transiting object is not a stellar companion or a background eclipsing binary blended with the target. The shape of the transit, the constancy of the transit depth and periodicity over 1.5 years, and the independence with wavelength rules out stellar variability, or a dust cloud or debris disk partially occulting the star as the source of the signal; we conclude it must instead be planetary in origin. The existence of K2-33b suggests close-in planets can form in situ or migrate within


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Refined rotational period, pole solution, and shape model for (3200) Phaethon

Megan Ansdell; K. J. Meech; Olivier R. Hainaut; Marc William Buie; Heather Kaluna; James Monie Bauer; Luke R. Dundon

\sim 10


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Identification of young stellar variables with KELT for K2 – II. The Upper Scorpius association

Megan Ansdell; Ryan J. Oelkers; Joseph E. Rodriguez; Eric Gaidos; Garrett Somers; Eric E. Mamajek; Phillip A. Cargile; Keivan G. Stassun; Joshua Pepper; Daniel J. Stevens; Thomas G. Beatty; Robert J. Siverd; Michael B. Lund; Rudolf B. Kuhn; D. J. James; B. Scott Gaudi

Myr, e.g., via interactions with a disk, and that long-timescale dynamical migration such as by Lidov-Kozai or planet-planet scattering is not responsible for all short-period planets.

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Eric Gaidos

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Andrew W. Mann

University of Texas at Austin

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Aaron C. Rizzuto

University of Texas at Austin

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Andrew Vanderburg

University of Texas at Austin

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Adam L. Kraus

University of Texas at Austin

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Gregory N. Mace

University of Texas at Austin

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