Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Peter Plavchan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Peter Plavchan.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

YSOVAR: THE FIRST SENSITIVE, WIDE-AREA, MID-INFRARED PHOTOMETRIC MONITORING OF THE ORION NEBULA CLUSTER

M. Morales-Calderon; John R. Stauffer; Lynne A. Hillenbrand; Robert Allen Gutermuth; Inseok Song; Luisa Marie Rebull; Peter Plavchan; John M. Carpenter; Barbara A. Whitney; Kevin R. Covey; C. Alves de Oliveira; E. M. Winston; Mark J. McCaughrean; J. Bouvier; S. Guieu; Frederick J. Vrba; J. Holtzman; Franck Marchis; Joseph L. Hora; L. H. Wasserman; Susan Terebey; Thomas S. Megeath; E. F. Guinan; Jan Forbrich; N. Huélamo; Pablo Riviere-Marichalar; D. Barrado; Karl R. Stapelfeldt; Jesús Hernández; Lori E. Allen

We present initial results from time-series imaging at infrared wavelengths of 0.9 deg^2 in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). During Fall 2009 we obtained 81 epochs of Spitzer 3.6 and 4.5 μm data over 40 consecutive days. We extracted light curves with ~3% photometric accuracy for ~2000 ONC members ranging from several solar masses down to well below the hydrogen-burning mass limit. For many of the stars, we also have time-series photometry obtained at optical (I_c) and/or near-infrared (JK_s ) wavelengths. Our data set can be mined to determine stellar rotation periods, identify new pre-main-sequence eclipsing binaries, search for new substellar Orion members, and help better determine the frequency of circumstellar disks as a function of stellar mass in the ONC. Our primary focus is the unique ability of 3.6 and 4.5 μm variability information to improve our understanding of inner disk processes and structure in the Class I and II young stellar objects (YSOs). In this paper, we provide a brief overview of the YSOVAR Orion data obtained in Fall 2009 and highlight our light curves for AA-Tau analogs—YSOs with narrow dips in flux, most probably due to disk density structures passing through our line of sight. Detailed follow-up observations are needed in order to better quantify the nature of the obscuring bodies and what this implies for the structure of the inner disks of YSOs.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2013

The NASA Exoplanet Archive: Data and Tools for Exoplanet Research

R. L. Akeson; X. Chen; David R. Ciardi; M. Crane; John C. Good; M. Harbut; E. Jackson; S. R. Kane; Anastasia C. Laity; Stephanie Leifer; M. Lynn; D. L. McElroy; M. Papin; Peter Plavchan; Solange V. Ramirez; R. Rey; K. von Braun; M. Wittman; M. Abajian; B. Ali; C. Beichman; A. Beekley; G. B. Berriman; S. Berukoff; G. Bryden; B. Chan; S. Groom; C. Lau; A. N. Payne; M. Regelson

ABSTRACT.We describe the contents and functionality of the NASA Exoplanet Archive, a database and toolset funded by NASA to support astronomers in the exoplanet community. The current content of the database includes interactive tables containing properties of all published exoplanets, Kepler planet candidates, threshold-crossing events, data validation reports and target stellar parameters, light curves from the Kepler and CoRoT missions and from several ground-based surveys, and spectra and radial velocity measurements from the literature. Tools provided to work with these data include a transit ephemeris predictor, both for single planets and for observing locations, light curve viewing and normalization utilities, and a periodogram and phased light curve service. The archive can be accessed at http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

NEW DEBRIS DISKS AROUND YOUNG, LOW-MASS STARS DISCOVERED WITH THE SPITZER SPACE TELESCOPE

Peter Plavchan; M. Werner; C. H. Chen; Karl R. Stapelfeldt; K. Y. L. Su; John R. Stauffer; Inseok Song

We present 24 μm and 70 μm Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) observations of 70 A through M-type dwarfs with estimated ages from 8 Myr to 1.1 Gyr, as part of a Spitzer guaranteed time program, including a re-analysis of some previously published source photometry. Our sample is selected from stars with common youth indicators such as lithium abundance, X-ray activity, chromospheric activity, and rapid rotation. We compare our MIPS observations to empirically derived K_s -[24] colors as a function of the stellar effective temperature to identify 24 μm and 70 μm excesses. We place constraints or upper limits on dust temperatures and fractional infrared luminosities with a simple blackbody dust model. We confirm the previously published 70 μm excesses for HD 92945, HD 112429, and AU Mic, and provide updated flux density measurements for these sources. We present the discovery of 70 μm excesses for five stars: HD 7590, HD 10008, HD 59967, HD 73350, and HD 135599. HD 135599 is also a known Spitzer IRS (InfraRed Spectrograph) excess source, and we confirm the excess at 24 μm. We also present the detection of 24 μm excesses for 10 stars: HD 10008, GJ 3400A, HD 73350, HD 112429, HD 123998, HD 175742, AT Mic, BO Mic, HD 358623 and Gl 907.1. We find that large 70 μm excesses are less common around stars with effective temperatures of less than 5000 K (3.7^(+7.6)_(–1.1)%) than around stars with effective temperatures between 5000 K and 6000 K (21.4^(+9.5)_(–5.7)%), despite the cooler stars having a younger median age in our sample (12 Myr vs. 340 Myr). We find that the previously reported excess for TWA 13A at 70 μm is due to a nearby background galaxy, and the previously reported excess for HD 177724 is due to saturation of the near-infrared photometry used to predict the mid-infrared stellar flux contribution. In the Appendix, we present an updated analysis of dust grain removal timescales due to grain-grain collisions and radiation pressure, Poynting-Robertson (P-R) drag, stellar wind drag, and planet-dust dynamical interaction. We find that drag forces can be important for disk dynamics relative to grain-grain collisions for L_(IR)/L_* < 10^(–4), and that stellar wind drag is more important than P-R drag for K and M dwarfs, and possibly for young (<1 Gyr) G dwarfs as well.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2015

PLANETARY CANDIDATES OBSERVED BYKEPLER. VI. PLANET SAMPLE FROM Q1–Q16 (47 MONTHS)

Fergal Mullally; Jeffrey L. Coughlin; Susan E. Thompson; Jason F. Rowe; Christopher J. Burke; David W. Latham; Natalie M. Batalha; Stephen T. Bryson; Jessie L. Christiansen; Christopher E. Henze; A. Ofir; Billy Quarles; Avi Shporer; Vincent Van Eylen; Christa Van Laerhoven; Yash Shah; Angie Wolfgang; W. J. Chaplin; Ji-Wei Xie; R. L. Akeson; Vic S. Argabright; Eric Bachtell; William J. Borucki; Douglas A. Caldwell; Jennifer R. Campbell; Joseph H. Catanzarite; William D. Cochran; Riley M. Duren; Scott W. Fleming; Dorothy Ann Fraquelli

We provide updates to the Kepler planet candidate sample based upon nearly two years of high-precision photometry (i.e., Q1-Q8). From an initial list of nearly 13,400 threshold crossing events, 480 new host stars are identified from their flux time series as consistent with hosting transiting planets. Potential transit signals are subjected to further analysis using the pixel-level data, which allows background eclipsing binaries to be identified through small image position shifts during transit. We also re-evaluate Kepler Objects of Interest (KOIs) 1-1609, which were identified early in the mission, using substantially more data to test for background false positives and to find additional multiple systems. Combining the new and previous KOI samples, we provide updated parameters for 2738 Kepler planet candidates distributed across 2017 host stars. From the combined Kepler planet candidates, 472 are new from the Q1-Q8 data examined in this study. The new Kepler planet candidates represent ~40% of the sample with R P ~ 1 R ? and represent ~40% of the low equilibrium temperature (T eq < 300?K) sample. We review the known biases in the current sample of Kepler planet candidates relevant to evaluating planet population statistics with the current Kepler planet candidate sample.


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 | 2005

Where Are the M Dwarf Disks Older Than 10 Million Years

Peter Plavchan; M. Jura; S. J. Lipscy

We present 11.7 μm observations of nine late-type dwarfs obtained at the Keck I 10 m telescope in 2002 December and 2003 April. Our targets were selected for their youth or apparent IRAS 12 μm excess. For all nine sources, excess infrared emission is not detected. We find that stellar wind drag can dominate the circumstellar grain removal and plausibly explain the dearth of M dwarf systems older than 10 Myr with currently detected infrared excesses. We predict that M dwarfs possess fractional infrared excesses on the order of LIR/L* ~ 10-6 and that this may be detectable with future efforts.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

SPITZER MID-IR SPECTRA OF DUST DEBRIS AROUND A AND LATE B TYPE STARS: ASTEROID BELT ANALOGS AND POWER-LAW DUST DISTRIBUTIONS

Farisa Y. Morales; M. Werner; G. Bryden; Peter Plavchan; Karl R. Stapelfeldt; G. H. Rieke; K. Y. L. Su; C. A. Beichman; C. H. Chen; Keith Grogan; Scott J. Kenyon; Amaya Moro-Martin; Sebastian Wolf

Using the Spitzer/Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) low-resolution modules covering wavelengths from 5 to 35 μm, we observed 52 main-sequence A and late B type stars previously seen using Spitzer/Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIPS) to have excess infrared emission at 24 μm above that expected from the stellar photosphere. The mid-IR excess is confirmed in all cases but two. While prominent spectral features are not evident in any of the spectra, we observed a striking diversity in the overall shape of the spectral energy distributions. Most of the IRS excess spectra are consistent with single-temperature blackbody emission, suggestive of dust located at a single orbital radius—a narrow ring. Assuming the excess emission originates from a population of large blackbody grains, dust temperatures range from 70 to 324 K, with a median of 190 K corresponding to a distance of 10 AU. Thirteen stars however, have dust emission that follows a power-law distribution, F_ν = F 0λ^α, with exponent α ranging from 1.0 to 2.9. The warm dust in these systems must span a greater range of orbital locations—an extended disk. All of the stars have also been observed with Spitzer/MIPS at 70 μm, with 27 of the 50 excess sources detected (signal-to-noise ratio > 3). Most 70 μm fluxes are suggestive of a cooler, Kuiper Belt-like component that may be completely independent of the asteroid belt-like warm emission detected at the IRS wavelengths. Fourteen of 37 sources with blackbody-like fits are detected at 70 μm. The 13 objects with IRS excess emission fit by a power-law disk model, however, are all detected at 70 μm (four above, three on, and six below the extrapolated power law), suggesting that the mid-IR IRS emission and far-IR 70 μm emission may be related for these sources. Overall, the observed blackbody and power-law thermal profiles reveal debris distributed in a wide variety of radial structures that do not appear to be correlated with spectral type or stellar age. An additional 43 fainter A and late B type stars without 70 μm photometry were also observed with Spitzer/IRS; results are summarized in Appendix B.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2016

State of the Field: Extreme Precision Radial Velocities*

Debra A. Fischer; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Pamela Arriagada; Roman V. Baluev; Jacob L. Bean; F. Bouchy; Lars A. Buchhave; Thorsten Carroll; Abhijit Chakraborty; Justin R. Crepp; Rebekah I. Dawson; Scott A. Diddams; X. Dumusque; Jason D. Eastman; Michael Endl; P. Figueira; Eric B. Ford; Daniel Foreman-Mackey; Paul Fournier; Gábor Fűrész; B. Scott Gaudi; Philip C. Gregory; F. Grundahl; A. Hatzes; G. Hébrard; E. Herrero; David W. Hogg; Andrew W. Howard; John Asher Johnson; Paul Jorden

The Second Workshop on Extreme Precision Radial Velocities defined circa 2015 the state of the art Doppler precision and identified the critical path challenges for reaching 10 cm s^(−1) measurement precision. The presentations and discussion of key issues for instrumentation and data analysis and the workshop recommendations for achieving this bold precision are summarized here. Beginning with the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher spectrograph, technological advances for precision radial velocity (RV) measurements have focused on building extremely stable instruments. To reach still higher precision, future spectrometers will need to improve upon the state of the art, producing even higher fidelity spectra. This should be possible with improved environmental control, greater stability in the illumination of the spectrometer optics, better detectors, more precise wavelength calibration, and broader bandwidth spectra. Key data analysis challenges for the precision RV community include distinguishing center of mass (COM) Keplerian motion from photospheric velocities (time correlated noise) and the proper treatment of telluric contamination. Success here is coupled to the instrument design, but also requires the implementation of robust statistical and modeling techniques. COM velocities produce Doppler shifts that affect every line identically, while photospheric velocities produce line profile asymmetries with wavelength and temporal dependencies that are different from Keplerian signals. Exoplanets are an important subfield of astronomy and there has been an impressive rate of discovery over the past two decades. However, higher precision RV measurements are required to serve as a discovery technique for potentially habitable worlds, to confirm and characterize detections from transit missions, and to provide mass measurements for other space-based missions. The future of exoplanet science has very different trajectories depending on the precision that can ultimately be achieved with Doppler measurements.


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 | 2014

CSI 2264: Characterizing Accretion-Burst Dominated Light Curves for Young Stars in NGC 2264

John R. Stauffer; Ann Marie Cody; A. Baglin; Silvia H. P. Alencar; Luisa Marie Rebull; Lynne A. Hillenbrand; Laura Venuti; Neal J. Turner; John M. Carpenter; Peter Plavchan; Krzysztof Findeisen; Sean J. Carey; Susan Terebey; M. Morales-Calderon; J. Bouvier; Giusi Micela; E. Flaccomio; Inseok Song; Rob Gutermuth; Lee Hartmann; Nuria Calvet; Barbara A. Whitney; D. Barrado; Frederick J. Vrba; Kevin R. Covey; William Herbst; Gabor Furesz; S. Aigrain; F. Favata

Based on more than four weeks of continuous high cadence photometric monitoring of several hundred members of the young cluster NGC 2264 with two space telescopes, NASA’s Spitzer and the CNES CoRoT (Convection, Rotation, and planetary Transits), we provide high quality, multi-wavelength light curves for young stellar objects (YSOs) whose optical variability is dominated by short duration flux bursts, which we infer are due to enhanced mass accretion rates. These light curves show many brief – several hour to one day – brightenings at optical and near-infrared (IR) wavelengths with amplitudes generally in the range 5-50% of the quiescent value. Typically, a dozen or more of these bursts occur in a thirty day period. We demonstrate that stars exhibiting this type of variability have large ultraviolet (UV) excesses and dominate the portion of the u − g vs. g − r color-color diagram with the largest UV excesses. These stars also have large Hɑ equivalent widths, and either centrally peaked, lumpy Hɑ emission profiles or profiles with blue-shifted absorption dips associated with disk or stellar winds. Light curves of this type have been predicted for stars whose accretion is dominated by Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities at the boundary between their magnetosphere and inner circumstellar disk, or where magneto-rotational instabilities modulate the accretion rate from the inner disk. Amongst the stars with the largest UV excesses or largest Hɑ equivalent widths, light curves with this type of variability greatly outnumber light curves with relatively smooth sinusoidal variations associated with long-lived hot spots. We provide quantitative statistics for the average duration and strength of the accretion bursts and for the fraction of the accretion luminosity associated with these bursts.

Collaboration


Dive into the Peter Plavchan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luisa Marie Rebull

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David R. Ciardi

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin R. Covey

Western Washington University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stephen R. Kane

San Francisco State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Allen Gutermuth

University of Massachusetts Amherst

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Morales-Calderon

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Angelle Maria Tanner

Mississippi State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Bryden

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge