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Featured researches published by P. Manoj.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2014

THE SPITZER INFRARED SPECTROGRAPH DEBRIS DISK CATALOG. I. CONTINUUM ANALYSIS OF UNRESOLVED TARGETS

C. H. Chen; Tushar Mittal; Marc J. Kuchner; William J. Forrest; Carey Michael Lisse; P. Manoj; Benjamin A. Sargent; Dan M. Watson

During the Spitzer Space Telescope cryogenic mission, Guaranteed Time Observers, Legacy Teams, and General Observers obtained Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) observations of hundreds of debris disk candidates. We calibrated the spectra of 571 candidates, including 64 new IRAS and Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) debris disks candidates, modeled their stellar photospheres, and produced a catalog of excess spectra for unresolved debris disks. For 499 targets with IRS excess but without strong spectral features (and a subset of 420 targets with additional MIPS 70 μm observations), we modeled the IRS (and MIPS data) assuming that the dust thermal emission was well-described using either a one- or two-temperature blackbody model. We calculated the probability for each model and computed the average probability to select among models. We found that the spectral energy distributions for the majority of objects (~66%) were better described using a two-temperature model with warm (T gr ~ 100-500 K) and cold (T gr ~ 50-150 K) dust populations analogous to zodiacal and Kuiper Belt dust, suggesting that planetary systems are common in debris disks and zodiacal dust is common around host stars with ages up to ~1 Gyr. We found that younger stars generally have disks with larger fractional infrared luminosities and higher grain temperatures and that higher-mass stars have disks with higher grain temperatures. We show that the increasing distance of dust around debris disks is inconsistent with self-stirred disk models, expected if these systems possess planets at 30-150 AU. Finally, we illustrate how observations of debris disks may be used to constrain the radial dependence of material in the minimum mass solar nebula.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

THE SPITZER INFRARED SPECTROGRAPH DEBRIS DISK CATALOG. II. SILICATE FEATURE ANALYSIS OF UNRESOLVED TARGETS

Tushar Mittal; C. H. Chen; Hannah Jang-Condell; P. Manoj; Benjamin A. Sargent; Dan M. Watson; Carey Michael Lisse

During the Spitzer Space Telescope cryogenic mission, astronomers obtained Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) observations of hundreds of debris disk candidates that have been compiled in the Spitzer IRS Debris Disk Catalog. We have discovered 10 and/or 20 ?m silicate emission features toward 120 targets in the catalog and modeled the IRS spectra of these sources, consistent with MIPS 70 ?m observations, assuming that the grains are composed of silicates (olivine, pyroxene, forsterite, and enstatite) and are located either in a continuous disk with power-law size and surface density distributions or thin rings that are well-characterized using two separate dust grain temperatures. For systems better fit by the continuous disk model, we find that (1) the dust size distribution power-law index is consistent with that expected from a collisional cascade, q = 3.5-4.0, with a large number of values outside this range, and (2) the minimum grain size, a min, increases with stellar luminosity, L *, but the dependence of a min on L * is weaker than expected from radiation pressure alone. In addition, we also find that (3)?the crystalline fraction of dust in debris disks evolves as a function of time with a large dispersion in crystalline fractions for stars of any particular stellar age or mass, (4) the disk inner edge is correlated with host star mass, and (5) there exists substantial variation in the properties of coeval disks in Sco-Cen, indicating that the observed variation is probably due to stochasticity and diversity in planet formation.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2016

THE HERSCHEL ORION PROTOSTAR SURVEY: SPECTRAL ENERGY DISTRIBUTIONS AND FITS USING A GRID OF PROTOSTELLAR MODELS

Elise Furlan; William J. Fischer; Babar Ali; Amelia M. Stutz; T. Stanke; John J. Tobin; S. T. Megeath; Mayra Osorio; Lee Hartmann; Nuria Calvet; Charles A. Poteet; J. Booker; P. Manoj; Dan M. Watson; Lori E. Allen

We present key results from the Herschel Orion Protostar Survey (HOPS): spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and model fits of 330 young stellar objects, predominantly protostars, in the Orion molecular clouds. This is the largest sample of protostars studied in a single, nearby star-formation complex. With near-infrared photometry from 2MASS, mid- and far-infrared data from Spitzer and Herschel, and sub-millimeter photometry from APEX, our SEDs cover 1.2-870


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

Detections of Trans-Neptunian Ice in Protoplanetary Disks

M. K. McClure; Catherine Espaillat; Nuria Calvet; Edwin A. Bergin; Paola D'Alessio; Dan M. Watson; P. Manoj; Benjamin A. Sargent; L. I. Cleeves

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

On the Nature of the Deeply Embedded Protostar OMC-2 FIR 4

Elise Furlan; S. T. Megeath; Mayra Osorio; Amelia M. Stutz; W. J. Fischer; B. Ali; Thomas Stanke; P. Manoj; Joseph D. Adams; John J. Tobin

m and sample the peak of the protostellar envelope emission at ~100


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

Characterizing the Youngest Herschel-detected Protostars. I. Envelope Structure Revealed by CARMA Dust Continuum Observations

John J. Tobin; Amelia M. Stutz; S. Thomas Megeath; William J. Fischer; Thomas Henning; Sarah Ragan; Babar Ali; Thomas Stanke; P. Manoj; Nuria Calvet; Lee Hartmann

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

SPITZER IRS SPECTRA OF DEBRIS DISKS IN THE SCORPIUS–CENTAURUS OB ASSOCIATION

Hannah Jang-Condell; C. H. Chen; Tushar Mittal; P. Manoj; Dan M. Watson; Carey Michael Lisse; Erika R. Nesvold; Marc J. Kuchner

m. Using mid-IR spectral indices and bolometric temperatures, we classify our sample into 92 Class 0 protostars, 125 Class I protostars, 102 flat-spectrum sources, and 11 Class II pre-main-sequence stars. We implement a simple protostellar model (including a disk in an infalling envelope with outflow cavities) to generate a grid of 30400 model SEDs and use it to determine the best-fit model parameters for each protostar. We argue that far-IR data are essential for accurate constraints on protostellar envelope properties. We find that most protostars, and in particular the flat-spectrum sources, are well-fit. The median envelope density and median inclination angle decrease from Class 0 to Class I to flat-spectrum protostars, despite the broad range in best-fit parameters in each of the three categories. We also discuss degeneracies in our model parameters. Our results confirm that the different protostellar classes generally correspond to an evolutionary sequence with a decreasing envelope infall rate, but the inclination angle also plays a role in the appearance, and thus interpretation, of the SEDs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

EVOLUTION OF MASS OUTFLOW IN PROTOSTARS

Dan M. Watson; Nuria P. Calvet; William J. Fischer; William J. Forrest; P. Manoj; S. Thomas Megeath; Gary J. Melnick; Joan R. Najita; David A. Neufeld; Patrick D. Sheehan; Amelia M. Stutz; John J. Tobin

We present Herschel Space Observatory PACS spectra of T Tauri stars, in which we detect amorphous and crystalline water ice features. Using irradiated accretion disk models, we determine the disk structure and ice abundance in each of the systems. Combining a model-independent comparison of the ice feature strength and disk size with a detailed analysis of the model ice location, we estimate that the ice emitting region is at disk radii >30AU, consistent with a proto-Kuiper belt. Vertically, the ice emits most below the photodesorption zone, consistent with Herschel observations of cold water vapor. The presence of crystallized water ice at a disk location a) colder than its crystallization temperature and b) where it should have been re-amorphized in ~1 Myr suggests that localized generation is occurring; the most likely cause appears to be micrometeorite impact or planetesimal collisions. Based on simple tests with UV models and different ice distributions, we suggest that the SED shape from 20 to 50 micron may probe the location of the water ice snow line in the disk upper layers. This project represents one of the first extra-solar probes of the spatial structure of the cometary ice reservoir thought to deliver water to terrestrial planets.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

The Herschel Orion Protostar Survey: Luminosity and Envelope Evolution

William J. Fischer; S. Thomas Megeath; Elise Furlan; Babar Ali; Amelia M. Stutz; John J. Tobin; Mayra Osorio; Thomas Stanke; P. Manoj; Charles A. Poteet; J. Booker; Lee Hartmann; Thomas L. Wilson; Philip C. Myers; Dan M. Watson

We use mid-infrared to submillimeter data from the Spitzer, Herschel, and Atacama Pathfinder Experiment telescopes to study the bright submillimeter source OMC-2 FIR 4. We find a point source at 8, 24, and 70 μm, and a compact, but extended source at 160, 350, and 870 μm. The peak of the emission from 8 to 70 μm, attributed to the protostar associated with FIR 4, is displaced relative to the peak of the extended emission; the latter represents the large molecular core the protostar is embedded within. We determine that the protostar has a bolometric luminosity of 37 L☉, although including more extended emission surrounding the point source raises this value to 86 L☉. Radiative transfer models of the protostellar system fit the observed spectral energy distribution well and yield a total luminosity of most likely less than 100 L☉. Our models suggest that the bolometric luminosity of the protostar could be as low as 12-14 L☉, while the luminosity of the colder (~20 K) extended core could be around 100 L☉, with a mass of about 27 M☉. Our derived luminosities for the protostar OMC-2 FIR 4 are in direct contradiction with previous claims of a total luminosity of 1000 L☉. Furthermore, we find evidence from far-infrared molecular spectra and 3.6 cm emission that FIR 4 drives an outflow. The final stellar mass the protostar will ultimately achieve is uncertain due to its association with the large reservoir of mass found in the cold core.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE EVOLUTION OF FAR-INFRARED CO EMISSION FROM PROTOSTARS

P. Manoj; Joel D. Green; S. T. Megeath; Neal J. Evans; Amelia M. Stutz; John J. Tobin; Dan M. Watson; William J. Fischer; Elise Furlan; T. Henning

We present CARMA 2.9 mm dust continuum emission observations of a sample of 14 Herschel-detected Class 0 protostars in the Orion A and B molecular clouds, drawn from the PACS Bright Red Sources (PBRS) sample (Stutz et al.). These objects are characterized by very red 24 \micron\ to 70 \micron\ colors and prominent submillimeter emission, suggesting that they are very young Class 0 protostars embedded in dense envelopes. We detect all of the PBRS in 2.9 mm continuum emission and emission from 4 protostars and 1 starless core in the fields toward the PBRS; we also report 1 new PBRS source. The ratio of 2.9 mm luminosity to bolometric luminosity is higher by a factor of

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William J. Fischer

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Elise Furlan

California Institute of Technology

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Thomas Stanke

European Southern Observatory

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Mayra Osorio

Spanish National Research Council

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Babar Ali

California Institute of Technology

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