Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. Casassus is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. Casassus.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

The Anisotropy of the microwave background to l = 3500: Mosaic observations with the Cosmic Background Imager

B. S. Mason; Timothy J. Pearson; A. C. S. Readhead; M. C. Shepherd; J. L. Sievers; Patricia Simcoe Udomprasert; J. K. Cartwright; Alison J. Farmer; S. Padin; S. T. Myers; J. R. Bond; C. R. Contaldi; U.-L. Pen; S. Prunet; Dmitri Pogosyan; J. E. Carlstrom; J. M. Kovac; E. M. Leitch; C. Pryke; N. W. Halverson; W. L. Holzapfel; P. Altamirano; Leonardo Bronfman; S. Casassus; J. May; M. Joy

We report measurements of anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background radiation over the multipole range l 200 3500 with the Cosmic Background Imager based on deep observations of three fields. These results confirm the drop in power with increasing l first reported in earlier measurements with this instrument and extend the observations of this decline in power out to l 2000. The decline in power is consistent with the predicted damping of primary anisotropies. At larger multipoles, l 1⁄4 2000 3500, the power is 3.1 greater than standard models for intrinsic microwave background anisotropy in this multipole range and 3.5 greater than zero. This excess power is not consistent with expected levels of residual radio source contamination but, for 8e1, is consistent with predicted levels of a secondary Sunyaev-Zeldovich anisotropy. Further observations are necessary to confirm the level of this excess and, if confirmed, determine its origin. Subject headings: cosmic microwave background — cosmology: observations


The Astrophysical Journal | 2004

Extended mosaic observations with the Cosmic Background Imager

A. C. S. Readhead; B. S. Mason; C. R. Contaldi; Timothy J. Pearson; J. R. Bond; S. T. Myers; S. Padin; J. L. Sievers; John K. Cartwright; M. C. Shepherd; Dmitry Pogosyan; S. Prunet; P. Altamirano; R. Bustos; Leonardo Bronfman; S. Casassus; W. L. Holzapfel; J. May; Ue-Li Pen; S. Torres; Patricia Simcoe Udomprasert

Two years of microwave background observations with the Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) have been combined to give a sensitive, high-resolution angular power spectrum over the range 400 2000 power previously seen with the CBI is reduced. Under the assumption that any signal in excess of the primary anisotropy is due to a secondary Sunyaev-Zeldovich anisotropy in distant galaxy clusters, we use CBI, Arcminute Cosmology Bolometer Array Receiver, and Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland Association array data to place a constraint on the present-day rms mass fluctuation on 8 h-1 Mpc scales, σ8. We present the results of a cosmological parameter analysis on the l < 2000 primary anisotropy data that show significant improvements in the parameters as compared to WMAP alone, and we explore the role of the small-scale cosmic microwave background data in breaking parameter degeneracies.


Nature | 2013

Flows of gas through a protoplanetary gap.

S. Casassus; Gerrit van der Plas; Sebastian Perez M; William R. F. Dent; Ed Fomalont; Janis Hagelberg; A. Hales; Andrés Jordán; Dimitri Mawet; Francois Menard; Al Wootten; David J. Wilner; A. Meredith Hughes; Matthias R. Schreiber; J. H. Girard; Barbara Ercolano; H. Canovas; Pablo E. Román; Vachail Salinas

The formation of gaseous giant planets is thought to occur in the first few million years after stellar birth. Models predict that the process produces a deep gap in the dust component (shallower in the gas). Infrared observations of the disk around the young star HD 142527 (at a distance of about 140 parsecs from Earth) found an inner disk about 10 astronomical units (au) in radius (1 au is the Earth–Sun distance), surrounded by a particularly large gap and a disrupted outer disk beyond 140 au. This disruption is indicative of a perturbing planetary-mass body at about 90 au. Radio observations indicate that the bulk mass is molecular and lies in the outer disk, whose continuum emission has a horseshoe morphology. The high stellar accretion rate would deplete the inner disk in less than one year, and to sustain the observed accretion matter must therefore flow from the outer disk and cross the gap. In dynamical models, the putative protoplanets channel outer-disk material into gap-crossing bridges that feed stellar accretion through the inner disk. Here we report observations of diffuse CO gas inside the gap, with denser HCO+ gas along gap-crossing filaments. The estimated flow rate of the gas is in the range of 7 × 10−9 to 2 × 10−7 solar masses per year, which is sufficient to maintain accretion onto the star at the present rate.1. Departamento de Astronomı́a, Universidad de Chile, Casilla 36-D, Santiago, Chile 2. Joint ALMA Observatory, Alonso de Córdova 3107, Vitacura 763-0355, Santiago Chile 3. European Southern Observatory (ESO), Casilla 19001, Vitacura, Santiago, Chile 4. National Radio Astronomy Observatory, 520 Edgemont Road, Charlottesville, VA 22903-2475, USA 5. Observatoire de Genève, Université de Genève, 51 ch. des Maillettes, 1290, Versoix, Switzerland 6. Departamento de Astronomı́a y Astrofı́sica, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile 7. UMI-FCA, CNRS / INSU France (UMI 3386) , and Departamento de Astronomı́a, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile. 8. CNRS / UJF Grenoble 1, UMR 5274, Institut de Planétologie et dAstrophysique de Grenoble (IPAG), France 9. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA 10. Department of Astronomy, U. C. Berkeley, 601 Campbell Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 11. Departamento de Fı́sica y Astronomı́a, Universidad Valparaiso, Av. Gran Bretana 111, Valparaiso, Chile. 12. University Observatory, Ludwig-Maximillians University, Munich.


Science | 2004

Polarization Observations with the Cosmic Background Imager

A. C. S. Readhead; S. T. Myers; Timothy J. Pearson; J. L. Sievers; B. S. Mason; C. R. Contaldi; J. R. Bond; R. Bustos; P. Altamirano; C. Achermann; Leonardo Bronfman; J. E. Carlstrom; John K. Cartwright; S. Casassus; C. Dickinson; W. L. Holzapfel; J. M. Kovac; E. M. Leitch; J. May; S. Padin; Dmitry Pogosyan; M. W. Pospieszalski; C. Pryke; R. Reeves; M. C. Shepherd; S. Torres

Polarization observations of the cosmic microwave background with the Cosmic Background Imager from September 2002 to May 2004 provide a significant detection of the E-mode polarization and reveal an angular power spectrum of polarized emission showing peaks and valleys that are shifted in phase by half a cycle relative to those of the total intensity spectrum. This key agreement between the phase of the observed polarization spectrum and that predicted on the basis of the total intensity spectrum provides support for the standard model of cosmology, in which dark matter and dark energy are the dominant constituents, the geometry is close to flat, and primordial density fluctuations are predominantly adiabatic with a matter power spectrum commensurate with inflationary cosmological models.


Science | 2014

Molecular Gas Clumps from the Destruction of Icy Bodies in the β Pictoris Debris Disk

William R. F. Dent; Mark C. Wyatt; Aki Roberge; J. C. Augereau; S. Casassus; S. Corder; J. S. Greaves; I. de Gregorio-Monsalvo; A. Hales; A. P. Jackson; A. Meredith Hughes; A. M. Lagrange; Brenda C. Matthews; D. Wilner

One-Sided Story from Disk In young analogs of the solar system, the ongoing erosion of comets and nascent planets produces dusty debris that is eventually expelled by the host star. Gas should also be released in this process when volatile ices sublimate, but it is detected less often. Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array, Dent et al. (p. 1490, published online 6 March; see the Perspective by Brandeker) mapped a highly asymmetric disk of dust and carbon monoxide orbiting the planet-hosting star, β Pictoris. The distribution of gas and dust is consistent with two proposed scenarios: In one, an outward-migrating planet has resonantly trapped dust-yielding bodies in two clumps opposite the star. In another, the entire debris mass is the result of a single recent collision of Mars-sized bodies. An asymmetric disk of dust and carbon monoxide indicates a recent large-scale collision or shepherding by an unseen planet. [Also see Perspective by Brandeker] Many stars are surrounded by disks of dusty debris formed in the collisions of asteroids, comets, and dwarf planets, but is gas also released in such events? Observations at submillimeter wavelengths of the archetypal debris disk around β Pictoris show that 0.3% of a Moon mass of carbon monoxide orbits in its debris belt. The gas distribution is highly asymmetric, with 30% found in a single clump 85 astronomical units from the star, in a plane closely aligned with the orbit of the inner planet, β Pictoris b. This gas clump delineates a region of enhanced collisions, either from a mean motion resonance with an unseen giant planet or from the remnants of a collision of Mars-mass planets.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Morphological Analysis of the Centimeter-Wave Continuum in the Dark Cloud LDN 1622

S. Casassus; G. F. Cabrera; Francisco Forster; Timothy J. Pearson; A. C. S. Readhead; C. Dickinson

The spectral energy distribution of the dark cloud LDN 1622, as measured by Finkbeiner using WMAP data, drops above 30 GHz and is suggestive of a Boltzmann cutoff in grain rotation frequencies, characteristic of spinning dust emission. LDN 1622 is conspicuous in the 31 GHz image we obtained with the Cosmic Background Imager, which is the first centimeter-wave resolved image of a dark cloud. The 31 GHz emission follows the emission traced by the four IRAS bands. The normalized cross-correlation of the 31 GHz image with the IRAS images is higher by 6.6 σ for the 12 and 25 μm bands than for the 60 and 100 μm bands: C12+25 = 0.76 ± 0.02, and C60+100 = 0.64 ± 0.01. The mid-IR-centimeter-wave correlation in LDN 1622 is evidence for very small grain (VSG) or continuum emission at 26-36 GHz from a hot molecular phase. In dark clouds and their photon-dominated regions (PDRs), the 12 and 25 μm emission is attributed to stochastic heating of the VSGs. The mid-IR and centimeter-wave dust emissions arise in a limb-brightened shell coincident with the PDR of LDN 1622, where the incident UV radiation from the Ori OB 1b association heats and charges the grains, as is required for spinning dust.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

SHADOWS CAST BY A WARP IN THE HD 142527 PROTOPLANETARY DISK

Sebastian Marino; Sebastian Perez; S. Casassus

Detailed observations of gaps in protoplanetary disks have revealed structures that drive current research on circumstellar disks. One such feature is the two intensity nulls seen along the outer disk of the HD 142527 system, which are particularly well traced in polarized differential imaging. Here we propose that these are shadows cast by the inner disk. The inner and outer disk are thick, in terms of the unit-opacity surface in H-band, so that the shape and orientation of the shadows inform on the three-dimmensional structure of the system. Radiative transfer predictions on a parametric disk model allow us to conclude that the relative inclination between the inner and outer disks is 70+-5 deg. This finding taps the potential of high-contrast imaging of circumstellar disks, and bears consequences on the gas dynamics of gapped disks, as well as on the physical conditions in the shadowed regions.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

Centimetre‐wave continuum radiation from the ρ Ophiuchi molecular cloud

S. Casassus; C. Dickinson; Kieran Cleary; R. Paladini; Mireya Etxaluze; Tanya Lim; G. J. White; Michael G. Burton; Balt Indermuehle; Otmar Stahl; P. F. Roche

The ρ Oph molecular cloud is undergoing intermediate-mass star formation. Ultraviolet radiation from its hottest young stars heats and dissociates exposed layers, but does not ionize hydrogen. Only faint radiation from the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of ∼10–100 K dust is expected at wavelengths longwards of ∼3 mm. Yet cosmic background imager (CBI) observations reveal that the ρ Oph W photodissociation region is surprisingly bright at centimetre wavelengths. We searched for interpretations consistent with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe radio spectrum, new Infrared Space Observatory-Long Wavelength Spectrograph (LWS) parallel mode images and archival Spitzer data. Dust-related emission mechanisms at 1 cm, as proposed by Draine & Lazarian, are a possibility. But a magnetic enhancement of the grain opacity at 1 cm is inconsistent with the morphology of the dust column maps Nd and the lack of detected polarization. Spinning dust, or electric-dipole radiation from spinning very small grains (VSGs), comfortably explains the radio spectrum, although not the conspicuous absence from the CBI data of the infrared circumstellar nebulae around the B-type stars S1 and SR3. Allowing for VSG depletion can marginally reconcile spinning dust with the data. As an alternative interpretation, we consider the continuum from residual charges in ρ Oph W, where most of carbon should be photoionized by the close binary HD 147889 (B2IV, B3IV). Electron densities of ∼10^2 cm^−3 , or H-nucleus densities nH > 10^6 cm^−3 , are required to interpret ρ Oph W as the C ii Stromgren sphere of HD 147889. However, the observed steep and positive low-frequency spectral index would then imply optically thick emission from an hitherto unobserved ensemble of dense clumps or sheets with a filling factor of ∼10^−4 and nH∼ 10^7 cm^−3 .


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

CO Gas Inside the Protoplanetary Disk Cavity in HD 142527: Disk Structure from ALMA

Sebastian Perez; S. Casassus; Francois Menard; Pablo E. Román; G. van der Plas; L. Cieza; C. Pinte; Valentin Christiaens; A. S. Hales

Inner cavities and annular gaps in circumstellar disks are possible signposts of giant planet formation. The young star HD 142527 hosts a massive protoplanetary disk with a large cavity that extends up to 140 AU from the central star, as seen in continuum images at infrared and millimeter wavelengths. Estimates of the survival of gas inside disk cavities are needed to discriminate between clearing scenarios. We present a spatially and spectrally resolved carbon monoxide isotopologue observations of the gas-rich disk HD 142527, in the J = 2-1 line of 12CO, 13CO, and C18O obtained with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). We detect emission coming from inside the dust-depleted cavity in all three isotopologues. Based on our analysis of the gas in the dust cavity, the 12CO emission is optically thick, while 13CO and C18O emissions are both optically thin. The total mass of residual gas inside the cavity is ~1.5-2 M Jup. We model the gas with an axisymmetric disk model. Our best-fit model shows that the cavity radius is much smaller in CO than it is in millimeter continuum and scattered light observations, with a gas cavity that does not extend beyond 105 AU (at 3?). The gap wall at its outer edge is diffuse and smooth in the gas distribution, while in dust continuum it is manifestly sharper. The inclination angle, as estimated from the high velocity channel maps, is 28 ? 0.5?deg, higher than in previous estimates, assuming a fix central star mass of 2.2 M ?.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

Near-infrared imaging polarimetry of HD142527 ?;??

H. Canovas; Francois Menard; A. Hales; Andrés Jordán; M. R. Schreiber; S. Casassus; T. M. Gledhill; C. Pinte

Context. HD 142527 is a pre-transition disk with strong evidence for ongoing planet formation. Recent observations show a disrupted disk with spiral arms, a dust-depleted inner cavity and the possible presence of gas streams driving gas from the outer disk toward the central star. Aims. We aim to derive the morphology of the disk and the distribution and properties of the dust at its surface. Methods. We have obtained polarized di erential images of HD 142527 at H and Ks bands with NaCo at the VLT. Combining these images with classical PSF-subtraction, we are able to derive the polarization degree of this disk. Results. At H band the polarization degree of the disk varies between 10% and 25%. This result cannot be reproduced by dust distributions containing highly porous material. The polarization is better matched by distributions of compact particles, with maximum sizes at least up to a few microns, in agreement with previous observations. We also observe two regions of low emission (nulls) in total and in polarized intensity. In particular, one of these nulls is at roughly the same position as the maximum of the horse-shoe shape observed in submillimeter continuum emission ALMA band-7 (345 GHz) observations. We discuss the possible link between these two features.

Collaboration


Dive into the S. Casassus's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Dickinson

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francois Menard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Hales

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. C. S. Readhead

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Canovas

Autonomous University of Madrid

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lucas A. Cieza

Diego Portales University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. D. Davies

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge