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Featured researches published by R. Silvotti.


Nature | 2007

A giant planet orbiting the 'extreme horizontal branch' star V 391 Pegasi

R. Silvotti; S. Schuh; R. Janulis; J.-E. Solheim; Stefano Bernabei; Roy Ostensen; Terry D. Oswalt; I Bruni; R Gualandi; Alfio Bonanno; G Vauclair; M. D. Reed; Cathy W. S. Chen; E. M. Leibowitz; M. Paparó; A. Baran; S. Charpinet; N Dolez; S. D. Kawaler; D. W. Kurtz; P Moskalik; R Riddle; S. Zola

After the initial discoveries fifteen years ago, over 200 extrasolar planets have now been detected. Most of them orbit main-sequence stars similar to our Sun, although a few planets orbiting red giant stars have been recently found. When the hydrogen in their cores runs out, main-sequence stars undergo an expansion into red-giant stars. This expansion can modify the orbits of planets and can easily reach and engulf the inner planets. The same will happen to the planets of our Solar System in about five billion years and the fate of the Earth is matter of debate. Here we report the discovery of a planetary-mass body (Msini = 3.2MJupiter) orbiting the star V 391 Pegasi at a distance of about 1.7 astronomical units (au), with a period of 3.2 years. This star is on the extreme horizontal branch of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram, burning helium in its core and pulsating. The maximum radius of the red-giant precursor of V 391 Pegasi may have reached 0.7 au, while the orbital distance of the planet during the stellar main-sequence phase is estimated to be about 1 au. This detection of a planet orbiting a post-red-giant star demonstrates that planets with orbital distances of less than 2 au can survive the red-giant expansion of their parent stars.


Nature | 2011

A compact system of small planets around a former red-giant star

S. Charpinet; G. Fontaine; P. Brassard; Elizabeth M. Green; Valérie Van Grootel; Suzanna K. Randall; R. Silvotti; A. Baran; Roy Ostensen; S. D. Kawaler; J. H. Telting

Planets that orbit their parent star at less than about one astronomical unit (1 au is the Earth–Sun distance) are expected to be engulfed when the star becomes a red giant. Previous observations have revealed the existence of post-red-giant host stars with giant planets orbiting as close as 0.116 au or with brown dwarf companions in tight orbits, showing that these bodies can survive engulfment. What has remained unclear is whether planets can be dragged deeper into the red-giant envelope without being disrupted and whether the evolution of the parent star itself could be affected. Here we report the presence of two nearly Earth-sized bodies orbiting the post-red-giant, hot B subdwarf star KIC 05807616 at distances of 0.0060 and 0.0076 au, with orbital periods of 5.7625 and 8.2293 hours, respectively. These bodies probably survived deep immersion in the former red-giant envelope. They may be the dense cores of evaporated giant planets that were transported closer to the star during the engulfment and triggered the mass loss necessary for the formation of the hot B subdwarf, which might also explain how some stars of this type did not form in binary systems.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

First Kepler results on compact pulsators – I. Survey target selection and the first pulsators

Roy Ostensen; R. Silvotti; S. Charpinet; R. Oreiro; G. Handler; Elizabeth M. Green; S. Bloemen; Ulrich Heber; B. T. Gänsicke; T. R. Marsh; D. W. Kurtz; J. H. Telting; M. D. Reed; S. D. Kawaler; Conny Aerts; C. Rodríguez-López; M. Vučković; T. A. Ottosen; T. Liimets; A. C. Quint; Valérie Van Grootel; Suzanna K. Randall; R. L. Gilliland; Hans Kjeldsen; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; Elisa V. Quintana

We present results from the first two quarters of a survey to search for pulsations in compact stellar objects with the Kepler spacecraft. The survey sample and the various methods applied in its compilation are described, and spectroscopic observations are presented to separate the objects into accurate classes. From the Kepler photometry we clearly identify nine compact pulsators and a number of interesting binary stars. Of the pulsators, one shows the strong, rapid pulsations typical of a V361 Hya-type sdB variable (sdBV); seven show long-period pulsation characteristics of V1093 Her-type sdBVs; and one shows low-amplitude pulsations with both short and long periods. We derive effective temperatures and surface gravities for all the subdwarf B stars in the sample and demonstrate that below the boundary region where hybrid sdB pulsators are found, all our targets are pulsating. For the stars hotter than this boundary temperature a low fraction of strong pulsators (<10 per cent) is confirmed. Interestingly, the short-period pulsator also shows a low-amplitude mode in the long-period region, and several of the V1093 Her pulsators show low-amplitude modes in the short-period region, indicating that hybrid behaviour may be common in these stars, also outside the boundary temperature region where hybrid pulsators have hitherto been found.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Kepler observations of the beaming binary KPD 1946+4340

S. Bloemen; T. R. Marsh; Roy Ostensen; S. Charpinet; G. Fontaine; P. Degroote; Ulrich Heber; S. D. Kawaler; Conny Aerts; Elizabeth M. Green; J. H. Telting; P. Brassard; B. T. Gänsicke; G. Handler; D. W. Kurtz; R. Silvotti; Valérie Van Grootel; Johan E. Lindberg; T. Pursimo; P. A. Wilson; R. L. Gilliland; Hans Kjeldsen; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; J. M. Jenkins; Todd C. Klaus

The Kepler Mission has acquired 33.5 d of continuous 1-min photometry of KPD 1946+4340, a short-period binary system that consists of a subdwarf B star (sdB) and a white dwarf. In the light curve, eclipses are clearly seen, with the deepest occurring when the compact white dwarf crosses the disc of the sdB (0.4 per cent) and the more shallow ones (0.1 per cent) when the sdB eclipses the white dwarf. As expected, the sdB is deformed by the gravitational field of the white dwarf, which produces an ellipsoidal modulation of the light curve. Spectacularly, a very strong Doppler beaming (also known as Doppler boosting) effect is also clearly evident at the 0.1 per cent level. This originates from the sdB’s orbital velocity, which we measure to be 164.0 ± 1. 9k m s −1 from supporting spectroscopy. We present light-curve models that account for all these effects, as well as gravitational lensing, which decreases the apparent radius of the white dwarf by about 6 per cent, when it eclipses the sdB. We derive system parameters and uncertainties from the light curve using Markov chain Monte Carlo simulations. Adopting a theoretical white dwarf mass–radius relation, the mass of the subdwarf is found ,


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

FIRST KEPLER RESULTS ON RR LYRAE STARS

Katrien Kolenberg; R. Szabó; D. W. Kurtz; R. L. Gilliland; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; H. Kjeldsen; Timothy M. Brown; J. M. Benkő; M. Chadid; A. Derekas; M. Di Criscienzo; E. Guggenberger; Karen Kinemuchi; A. Kunder; Z. Kolláth; G. Kopacki; P. Moskalik; James M. Nemec; J. Nuspl; R. Silvotti; Marian Doru Suran; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; J. M. Jenkins

We present the first results of our analyses of selected RR Lyrae stars for which data have been obtained by the Kepler Mission. As expected, we find a significant fraction of the RRab stars to show the Blazhko effect, a still unexplained phenomenon that manifests itself as periodic amplitude and phase modulations of the light curve, on timescales of typically tens to hundreds of days. The long time span of the Kepler Mission of 3.5 yr and the unprecedentedly high precision of its data provide a unique opportunity for the study of RR Lyrae stars. Using data of a modulated star observed in the first roll as a showcase, we discuss the data, our analyses, findings, and their implications for our understanding of RR Lyrae stars and the Blazhko effect. With at least 40% of the RR Lyrae stars in our sample showing modulation, we confirm the high incidence rate that was only found in recent high-precision studies. Moreover, we report the occurrence of additional frequencies, beyond the main pulsation mode and its modulation components. Their half-integer ratio to the main frequency is reminiscent of a period doubling effect caused by resonances, observed for the first time in RR Lyrae stars.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2003

CSL-1: chance projection effect or serendipitous discovery of a gravitational lens induced by a cosmic string?

M. V. Sazhin; Giuseppe Longo; M. Capaccioli; Juan M. Alcala; R. Silvotti; G. Covone; O. S. Khovanskaya; M. Pavlov; M. Pannella; M. Radovich; Vincenzo Testa

CSL-1 (Capodimonte–Sternberg–Lens Candidate, No.1) is an extragalactic double source detected in the OACDF (Osservatorio Astronomico di Capodimonte - Deep Field). It can be interpreted either as the chance alignment of two identical galaxies at z = 0.46 or as the first case of gravitational lensing by a cosmic string. Extensive modeling shows in fact that cosmic strings are the only type of lens which (at least at low angular resolution) can produce undistorted double images of a background source. We propose an experimentum crucis to disentangle between these two possible explanations. If the lensing by a cosmic string should be confirmed, it would provide the first measurements of energy scale of symmetry breaking and of the energy scale of Grand Unified Theory (GUT).


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

EARLY ASTEROSEISMIC RESULTS FROM KEPLER: STRUCTURAL AND CORE PARAMETERS OF THE HOT B SUBDWARF KPD 1943+4058 AS INFERRED FROM g-MODE OSCILLATIONS

Valérie Van Grootel; S. Charpinet; G. Fontaine; P. Brassard; Elizabeth M. Green; Suzanna K. Randall; R. Silvotti; Roy Ostensen; Hans Kjeldsen; Joergen Christensen-Dalsgaard; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch

We present a seismic analysis of the pulsating hot B subdwarf KPD 1943+4058 (KIC 005807616) on the basis of the long-period, gravity-mode pulsations recently uncovered by Kepler. This is the first time that g-mode seismology can be exploited quantitatively for stars on the extreme horizontal branch, all previous successful seismic analyses having been confined so far to short-period, p-mode pulsators. We demonstrate that current models of hot B subdwarfs can quite well explain the observed g-mode periods, while being consistent with independent constraints provided by spectroscopy. We identify the 18 pulsations retained in our analysis as low-degree (l = 1 and 2), intermediate-order (k = –9 through –58) g-modes. The periods (frequencies) are recovered, on average, at the 0.22% level, which is comparable to the best results obtained for p-mode pulsators. We infer the following structural and core parameters for KPD 1943+4058 (formal fitting uncertainties only): T eff = 28,050 ± 470 K, log g = 5.52 ± 0.03, M * = 0.496 ± 0.002 M ☉, log (M env/M *) = –2.55 ± 0.07, log (1 – M core/M *) = –0.37 ± 0.01, and X core(C+O) = 0.261 ± 0.008. We additionally derive the age of the star since the zero-age extended horizontal branch 18.4 ± 1.0 Myr, the radius R = 0.203 ± 0.007 R ☉, the luminosity L = 22.9 ± 3.13 L ☉, the absolute magnitude MV = 4.21 ± 0.11, the reddening index E(B – V) = 0.094 ± 0.017, and the distance d = 1180 ± 95 pc.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The GAPS programme with HARPS-N at TNG - I. Observations of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect and characterisation of the transiting system Qatar-1

E. Covino; M. Esposito; Mauro Barbieri; L. Mancini; Valerio Nascimbeni; R. U. Claudi; S. Desidera; R. Gratton; A. Lanza; A. Sozzetti; K. Biazzo; L. Affer; D. Gandolfi; Ulisse Munari; I. Pagano; A. S. Bonomo; A. Collier Cameron; G. Hébrard; A. Maggio; S. Messina; G. Micela; Emilio Molinari; F. Pepe; Giampaolo Piotto; Ignasi Ribas; N. C. Santos; J. Southworth; Evgenya L. Shkolnik; A. H. M. J. Triaud; L. R. Bedin

Context. Our understanding of the formation and evolution of planetary systems is still fragmentary because most of the current data provide limited information about the orbital structure and dynamics of these systems. The knowledge of the orbital properties for a variety of systems and at di erent ages yields information on planet migration and on star-planet tidal interaction mechanisms. Aims. In this context, a long-term, multi-purpose, observational programme has started with HARPS-N at TNG and aims to characterise the global architectural properties of exoplanetary systems. The goal of this first paper is to fully characterise the orbital properties of the transiting system Qatar-1 as well as the physical properties of the star and the planet. Methods. We exploit HARPS-N high-precision radial velocity measurements obtained during a transit to measure the Rossiter-McLaughlin e ect in the Qatar-1 system, and out-of-transit measurements to redetermine the spectroscopic orbit. New photometric-transit light-curves were analysed and a spectroscopic characterisation of the host star atmospheric parameters was performed based on various methods (line equivalent width ratios, spectral synthesis, spectral energy distribution). Results. We achieved a significant improvement in the accuracy of the orbital parameters and derived the spin-orbit alignment of the system; this information, combined with the spectroscopic determination of the host star properties (rotation, Te , logg, metallicity), allows us to derive the fundamental physical parameters for star and planet (masses and radii). The orbital solution for the Qatar-1 system is consistent with a circular orbit and the system presents a sky-projected obliquity of = 8:4 7:1 deg. The planet, with a mass of 1:33 0:05 MJ, is found to be significantly more massive than previously reported. The host star is confirmed to be metal-rich ([Fe/H] = 0:20 0:10) and slowly rotating (v sinI = 1:7 0:3 km s 1 ), though moderately active, as indicated by the strong chromospheric emission in the Caii H&K line cores (logR 0 4:60). Conclusions. We find that the system is well aligned and fits well within the general versus Te trend. We can definitely rule out any significant orbital eccentricity. The evolutionary status of the system is inferred based on gyrochronology, and the present orbital configuration and timescale for orbital decay are discussed in terms of star-planet tidal interactions.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

First Kepler results on compact pulsators – VI. Targets in the final half of the survey phase

Roy Ostensen; R. Silvotti; S. Charpinet; R. Oreiro; S. Bloemen; A. S. Baran; M. D. Reed; S. D. Kawaler; J. H. Telting; Elizabeth M. Green; S. J. O'Toole; Conny Aerts; B. T. Gänsicke; T. R. Marsh; E. Breedt; Ulrich Heber; D. Koester; A. C. Quint; D. W. Kurtz; C. Rodríguez-López; M. Vučković; T. A. Ottosen; S. Frimann; A. Somero; Paul A. Wilson; A. O. Thygesen; Johan E. Lindberg; Hans Kjeldsen; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; Christopher Allen

We present results from the final 6 months of a survey to search for pulsations in white dwarfs (WDs) and hot subdwarf stars with the Kepler spacecraft. Spectroscopic observations are used to separate the objects into accurate classes, and we explore the physical parameters of the subdwarf B (sdB) stars and white dwarfs in the sample. From the Kepler photometry and our spectroscopic data, we find that the sample contains five new pulsators of the V1093 Her type, one AMCVn type cataclysmic variable and a number of other binary systems. This completes the survey for compact pulsators with Kepler. No V361 Hya type of short-period pulsating sdB stars were found in this half, leaving us with a total of one single multiperiodic V361 Hya and 13 V1093 Her pulsators for the full survey. Except for the sdB pulsators, no other clearly pulsating hot subdwarfs or white dwarfs were found, although a few low-amplitude candidates still remain. The most interesting targets discovered in this survey will be observed throughout the remainder of the Kepler mission, providing the most long-term photometric data sets ever made on such compact, evolved stars. Asteroseismic investigations of these data sets will be invaluable in revealing the interior structure of these stars and will boost our understanding of their evolutionary history.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Deep asteroseismic sounding of the compact hot B subdwarf pulsator KIC02697388 from Kepler time series photometry

S. Charpinet; Valérie Van Grootel; G. Fontaine; Elizabeth M. Green; P. Brassard; Suzanna K. Randall; R. Silvotti; Roy Ostensen; Hans Kjeldsen; Joergen Christensen-Dalsgaard; S. D. Kawaler; Bruce D. Clarke; Jie Li; Bill Wohler

Context. Contemporary high precision photometry from space provided by the Kepler and CoRoT satellites generates significant breakthroughs in terms of exploiting the long-period, g-mode pulsating hot B subdwarf (sdBVs) stars with asteroseismology. Aims. We present a detailed asteroseismic study of the sdBVs star KIC02697388 monitored with Kepler, using the rich pulsation spectrum uncovered during the ∼27-day-long exploratory run Q2.3. Methods. We analyse new high-S/N spectroscopy of KIC02697388 using appropriate NLTE model atmospheres to provide accurate atmospheric parameters for this star. We also reanalyse the Kepler light curve using standard prewhitening techniques. On this basis, we apply a forward modelling technique using our latest generation of sdB models. The simultaneous match of the independent periods observed in KIC02697388 with those of models leads objectively to the identification of the pulsation modes and, more importantly, to the determination of some of the parameters of the star. Results. The light curve analysis reveals 43 independent frequencies that can be associated with oscillation modes. All the modulations observed in this star correspond to g-mode pulsations except one high-frequency signal, which is typical of a p-mode oscillation. Although the presence of this p-mode is surprising considering the atmospheric parameters that we derive for this cool sdB star (Teff = 25 395 ± 227 K, log g = 5.500 ± 0.031 (cgs), and log N(He)/N(H) = −2.767 ± 0.122), we show that this mode can be accounted for particularly well by our optimal seismic models, both in terms of frequency match and nonadiabatic properties. The seismic analysis leads us to identify two model solutions that can both account for the observed pulsation properties of KIC02697388. Despite this remaining ambiguity, several key parameters of the star can be derived with stringent constraints, such as its mass, its H-rich envelope mass, its radius, and its luminosity. We derive the properties of the core proposing that it is a relatively young sdB star that has burnt less than ∼34% (in mass) of its central helium and has a relatively large mixed He/C/O core. This latter measurement is in line with the trend already uncovered for two other g-mode sdB pulsators analysed with asteroseismology and suggests that extra mixing is occurring quite early in the evolution of He cores on the horizontal branch. Conclusions. Additional monitoring with Kepler of this particularly interesting sdB star should reveal the inner properties of KIC02697388 and provide important information about the mode driving mechanism and the helium core properties.

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Roy Ostensen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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M. D. Reed

Missouri State University

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S. Dreizler

University of Göttingen

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