Ruobing Dong
University of Arizona
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Featured researches published by Ruobing Dong.
Science | 2015
Bruce A. Macintosh; James R. Graham; Travis Barman; R. J. De Rosa; Quinn Konopacky; Mark S. Marley; Christian Marois; Eric L. Nielsen; Laurent Pueyo; Abhijith Rajan; Julien Rameau; Didier Saumon; Jason J. Wang; Jenny Patience; Mark Ammons; Pauline Arriaga; Étienne Artigau; Steven V. W. Beckwith; J. Brewster; Sebastian Bruzzone; Joanna Bulger; B. Burningham; Adam Burrows; C. H. Chen; Eugene Chiang; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Rebekah I. Dawson; Ruobing Dong; René Doyon; Zachary H. Draper
An exoplanet extracted from the bright Direct imaging of Jupiter-like exoplanets around young stars provides a glimpse into how our solar system formed. The brightness of young stars requires the use of next-generation devices such as the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI). Using the GPI, Macintosh et al. discovered a Jupiter-like planet orbiting a young star, 51 Eridani (see the Perspective by Mawet). The planet, 51 Eri b, has a methane signature and is probably the smallest exoplanet that has been directly imaged. These findings open the door to understanding solar system origins and herald the dawn of a new era in next-generation planetary imaging. Science, this issue p. 64; see also p. 39 The Gemini Planet Imager detects a Jupiter-like exoplanet orbiting the young star 51 Eridani. [Also see Perspective by Mawet] Directly detecting thermal emission from young extrasolar planets allows measurement of their atmospheric compositions and luminosities, which are influenced by their formation mechanisms. Using the Gemini Planet Imager, we discovered a planet orbiting the ~20-million-year-old star 51 Eridani at a projected separation of 13 astronomical units. Near-infrared observations show a spectrum with strong methane and water-vapor absorption. Modeling of the spectra and photometry yields a luminosity (normalized by the luminosity of the Sun) of 1.6 to 4.0 × 10−6 and an effective temperature of 600 to 750 kelvin. For this age and luminosity, “hot-start” formation models indicate a mass twice that of Jupiter. This planet also has a sufficiently low luminosity to be consistent with the “cold-start” core-accretion process that may have formed Jupiter.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Ruobing Dong; Zhaohuan Zhu; Barbara A. Whitney
It has been suggested that the gaps and cavities recently discovered in transitional disks are opened by planets. To explore this scenario, we combine two-dimensional two fluid (gas + particle) hydrodynamical calculations with three-dimensional Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer simulations, and study the observational signatures of gaps opened by one or several planets, making qualitative comparisons with observations. We find that a single planet as small as 0.2 MJ can produce a deep gap at millimeter (mm) wavelengths and almost no features at near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths, while multiple planets can open up a few *10 AU wide common gap at both wavelengths. Both the contrast ratio of the gaps and the wavelength dependence of the gap sizes are broadly consistent with data. We also confirm previous results that NIR gap sizes may be smaller than mm gap sizes due to dust-gas coupling and radiative transfer effects. When viewed at a moderate inclination angle, a physically circular on-centered gap could appear to be off-centered from the star due to shadowing. Planet-induced spiral arms are more apparent at NIR than at mm wavelengths. Overall, our results suggest that the planet-opening-gap scenario is a promising way to explain the origin of the transitional disks. Finally, inspired by the recent ALMA release of the image of the HL Tau disk, we show that multiple narrow gaps, well separated by bright rings, can be opened by 0.2 MJ planets soon after their formation in a relatively massive disk.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
Ruobing Dong; Roman R. Rafikov; Zhaohuan Zhu; Lee Hartmann; Barbara A. Whitney; Timothy D. Brandt; Takayuki Muto; Jun Hashimoto; C. A. Grady; Katherine B. Follette; Masayuki Kuzuhara; Ryoko Tanii; Yoichi Itoh; Christian Thalmann; John P. Wisniewski; Satoshi Mayama; Markus Janson; Lyu Abe; Wolfgang Brandner; Sebastian Egner; M. Feldt; Miwa Goto; Olivier Guyon; Y. Hayano; Masahiko Hayashi; Saeko S. Hayashi; Thomas Henning; K. W. Hodapp; Mitsuhiko Honda; Shu-ichiro Inutsuka
Transitional circumstellar disks around young stellar objects have a distinctive infrared deficit around 10 μm in their spectral energy distributions, recently measured by the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS), suggesting dust depletion in the inner regions. These disks have been confirmed to have giant central cavities by imaging of the submillimeter continuum emission using the Submillimeter Array (SMA). However, the polarized near-infrared scattered light images for most objects in a systematic IRS/SMA cross sample, obtained by HiCIAO on the Subaru telescope, show no evidence for the cavity, in clear contrast with SMA and Spitzer observations. Radiative transfer modeling indicates that many of these scattered light images are consistent with a smooth spatial distribution for μm-sized grains, with little discontinuity in the surface density of the μm-sized grains at the cavity edge. Here we present a generic disk model that can simultaneously account for the general features in IRS, SMA, and Subaru observations. Particularly, the scattered light images for this model are computed, which agree with the general trend seen in Subaru data. Decoupling between the spatial distributions of the μm-sized dust and mm-sized dust inside the cavity is suggested by the model, which, if confirmed, necessitates a mechanism, such as dust filtration, for differentiating the small and big dust in the cavity clearing process. Our model also suggests an inwardly increasing gas-to-dust ratio in the inner disk, and different spatial distributions for the small dust inside and outside the cavity, echoing the predictions in grain coagulation and growth models.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
S. Mayama; Jun Hashimoto; Takayuki Muto; Takashi Tsukagoshi; Nobuhiko Kusakabe; Masayuki Kuzuhara; Yasuhiro H. Takahashi; Tomoyuki Kudo; Ruobing Dong; Misato Fukagawa; Michihiro Takami; Munetake Momose; John P. Wisniewski; Katherine B. Follette; Lyu Abe; Eiji Akiyama; Wolfgang Brandner; Timothy D. Brandt; Sebastian Egner; M. Feldt; Miwa Goto; C. A. Grady; Olivier Guyon; Y. Hayano; Masahiko Hayashi; Saeko S. Hayashi; Thomas Henning; K. W. Hodapp; Miki Ishii; M. Iye
We report high-resolution (0.07 arcsec) near-infrared polarized intensity images of the circumstellar disk around the star 2MASS J16042165-2130284 obtained with HiCIAO mounted on the Subaru 8.2 m telescope. We present our
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
Ruobing Dong; Jesper Rasmussen; John S. Mulchaey
H
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Zhaohuan Zhu; Ruobing Dong; James M. Stone; Roman R. Rafikov
-band data, which clearly exhibits a resolved, face-on disk with a large inner hole for the first time at infrared wavelengths. We detect the centrosymmetric polarization pattern in the circumstellar material as has been observed in other disks. Elliptical fitting gives the semimajor axis, semiminor axis, and position angle (P.A.) of the disk as 63 AU, 62 AU, and -14
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
Ruobing Dong; Roman R. Rafikov; James M. Stone
^{\circ}
The Astrophysical Journal | 2009
Ruobing Dong; James M. Stone
, respectively. The disk is asymmetric, with one dip located at P.A.s of
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
Ruobing Dong; Jun Hashimoto; Roman R. Rafikov; Zhaohuan Zhu; Barbara A. Whitney; Tomoyuki Kudo; Takayuki Muto; Timothy D. Brandt; M. K. McClure; John P. Wisniewski; Lyu Abe; Wolfgang Brandner; Sebastian Egner; M. Feldt; Miwa Goto; C. A. Grady; Olivier Guyon; Y. Hayano; Masahiko Hayashi; Saeko S. Hayashi; Thomas Henning; K. W. Hodapp; Miki Ishii; M. Iye; Markus Janson; R. Kandori; G. R. Knapp; Nobuhiko Kusakabe; Masayuki Kuzuhara; Jungmi Kwon
\sim85^{\circ}
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
Ruobing Dong; B. T. Draine
. Our observed disk size agrees well with a previous study of dust and CO emission at submillimeter wavelength with Submillimeter Array. Hence, the near-infrared light is interpreted as scattered light reflected from the inner edge of the disk. Our observations also detect an elongated arc (50 AU) extending over the disk inner hole. It emanates at the inner edge of the western side of the disk, extending inward first, then curving to the northeast. We discuss the possibility that the inner hole, the dip, and the arc that we have observed may be related to the existence of unseen bodies within the disk.