Tara Cotten
University of Georgia
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Featured researches published by Tara Cotten.
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
Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer; James R. Graham; Laurent Pueyo; Paul Kalas; Rebekah I. Dawson; Jason J. Wang; Marshall D. Perrin; Dae Sik Moon; Bruce A. Macintosh; S. Mark Ammons; Travis Barman; Andrew Cardwell; C. H. Chen; Eugene Chiang; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; Robert J. De Rosa; Zachary H. Draper; Jennifer Dunn; Gaspard Duchene; Thomas M. Esposito; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; Stephen J. Goodsell; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Sasha Hinkley; Patrick Ingraham; Rebecca Jensen-Clem
© 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. We present H-band observations of β Pic with the Gemini Planet Imagers (GPIs) polarimetry mode that reveal the debris disk between ∼0.″3 (6 AU) and ∼1.″7 (33 AU), while simultaneously detecting β Pic b. The polarized disk image was fit with a dust density model combined with a Henyey-Greenstein scattering phase function. The best-fit model indicates a disk inclined to the line of sight () with a position angle (PA) (slightly offset from the main outer disk, ), that extends from an inner disk radius of to well outside GPIs field of view. In addition, we present an updated orbit for β Pic b based on new astrometric measurements taken in GPIs spectroscopic mode spanning 14 months. The planet has a semimajor axis of , with an eccentricity The PA of the ascending node is offset from both the outer main disk and the inner disk seen in the GPI image. The orbital fit constrains the stellar mass of β Pic to Dynamical sculpting by β Pic b cannot easily account for the following three aspects of the inferred disk properties: (1) the modeled inner radius of the disk is farther out than expected if caused by β Pic b; (2) the mutual inclination of the inner disk and β Pic b is when it is expected to be closer to zero; and (3) the aspect ratio of the disk () is larger than expected from interactions with β Pic b or self-stirring by the disks parent bodies.
The Astronomical Journal | 2016
Jason J. Wang; James R. Graham; Laurent Pueyo; Paul Kalas; Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer; Jean Baptiste Ruffio; Robert J. De Rosa; S. Mark Ammons; Pauline Arriaga; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Joanna Bulger; Adam Burrows; Andrew Cardwell; C. H. Chen; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; René Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Li Wei Hung; Patrick Ingraham; Quinn Konopacky; James E. Larkin; Bruce A. Macintosh; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis
Gemini Observatory; National Science Foundation [NSF AST-1518332]; NASA [NNX15AC89G, NNX15AD95G]; U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Jean Baptiste Ruffio; Bruce A. Macintosh; Jason J. Wang; Laurent Pueyo; Eric L. Nielsen; Robert J. De Rosa; Ian Czekala; Mark S. Marley; Pauline Arriaga; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Joanna Bulger; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; René Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; Benjamin L. Gerard; Stephen J. Goodsell; James R. Graham; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Li Wei Hung; Patrick Ingraham; Paul Kalas; Quinn Konopacky; James E. Larkin; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis
We present a new matched-filter algorithm for direct detection of point sources in the immediate vicinity of bright stars. The stellar point-spread function (PSF) is first subtracted using a Karhunen-Loeve image processing (KLIP) algorithm with angular and spectral differential imaging (ADI and SDI). The KLIP-induced distortion of the astrophysical signal is included in the matched-filter template by computing a forward model of the PSF at every position in the image. To optimize the performance of the algorithm, we conduct extensive planet injection and recovery tests and tune the exoplanet spectra template and KLIP reduction aggressiveness to maximize the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of the recovered planets. We show that only two spectral templates are necessary to recover any young Jovian exoplanets with minimal S/N loss. We also developed a complete pipeline for the automated detection of point-source candidates, the calculation of receiver operating characteristics (ROC), contrast curves based on false positives, and completeness contours. We process in a uniform manner more than 330 data sets from the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey and assess GPI typical sensitivity as a function of the star and the hypothetical companion spectral type. This work allows for the first time a comparison of different detection algorithms at a survey scale accounting for both planet completeness and false-positive rate. We show that the new forward model matched filter allows the detection of 50% fainter objects than a conventional cross-correlation technique with a Gaussian PSF template for the same false-positive rate.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Robert J. De Rosa; Eric L. Nielsen; Sarah C. Blunt; James R. Graham; Quinn Konopacky; Christian Marois; Laurent Pueyo; Julien Rameau; Dominic M. Ryan; Jason J. Wang; Vanessa P. Bailey; Ashley Chontos; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Katherine B. Follette; Bruce A. Macintosh; Franck Marchis; S. Mark Ammons; Pauline Arriaga; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; René Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Thomas M. Esposito; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Benjamin L. Gerard; Stephen J. Goodsell; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Patrick Ingraham; Mara Johnson-Groh
We present new Gemini Planet Imager observations of the young exoplanet 51 Eridani b which provide further evidence that the companion is physically associated with 51 Eridani. Combining this new astrometric measurement with those reported in the literature, we significantly reduce the posterior probability that 51 Eridani b is an unbound foreground or background T-dwarf in a chance alignment with 51 Eridani to
The Astronomical Journal | 2017
Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Laurent Pueyo; Robert J. De Rosa; Jeffrey Vargas; Bruce A. Macintosh; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Brian J. Bauman; Sebastian Bruzzone; Joanna Bulger; Adam Burrows; Andrew Cardwell; C. H. Chen; Tara Cotten; Daren Dillon; René Doyon; Zachary H. Draper; Gaspard Duchene; Jennifer Dunn; Darren Erikson; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; Donald Gavel; Stephen J. Goodsell; James R. Graham; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Markus Hartung; Pascale Hibon; Li Wei Hung; Patrick Ingraham
2\times10^{-7}
The Astronomical Journal | 2017
Julien Rameau; Katherine B. Follette; Laurent Pueyo; Christian Marois; Bruce A. Macintosh; Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer; Jason J. Wang; David Vega; René Doyon; David Lafrenière; Eric L. Nielsen; Vanessa P. Bailey; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Laird M. Close; Thomas M. Esposito; Jared R. Males; Stanimir Metchev; Katie M. Morzinski; Jean-Baptiste Ruffio; Schuyler Wolff; S. M. Ammons; Travis Barman; Joanna Bulger; Tara Cotten; Robert J. De Rosa; Gaspard Duchene; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Stephen J. Goodsell; James R. Graham; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum
, an order of magnitude lower than previously reported. If 51 Eridani b is indeed a bound object, then we have detected orbital motion of the planet between the discovery epoch and the latest epoch. By implementing a computationally efficient Monte Carlo technique, preliminary constraints are placed on the orbital parameters of the system. The current set of astrometric measurements suggest an orbital semimajor axis of
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2018
Jason J. Wang; Marshall D. Perrin; Dmitry Savransky; Pauline Arriaga; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Robert J. De Rosa; Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer; Christian Marois; Julien Rameau; Schuyler Wolff; Jacob Shapiro; Jean-Baptiste Ruffio; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis; James R. Graham; Bruce A. Macintosh; S. Mark Ammons; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Sebastian Bruzzone; Joanna Bulger; Tara Cotten; Rene Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; Stephen J. Goodsell; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Li-Wei Hung
14^{+7}_{-3}
The Astronomical Journal | 2017
Mara Johnson-Groh; Christian Marois; Robert J. De Rosa; Eric L. Nielsen; Julien Rameau; Sarah C. Blunt; Jeffrey Vargas; S. Mark Ammons; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Joanna Bulger; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; René Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Kate Follette; Stephen J. Goodsell; James R. Graham; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Li Wei Hung; Patrick Ingraham; Paul Kalas; Quinn Konopacky; James E. Larkin; Bruce A. Macintosh; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis; Mark S. Marley
AU, corresponding to a period of
The Astronomical Journal | 2016
Eric L. Nielsen; Robert J. De Rosa; Jason J. Wang; Julien Rameau; Inseok Song; James R. Graham; Bruce A. Macintosh; Mark Ammons; Vanessa P. Bailey; Travis Barman; Joanna Bulger; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Tara Cotten; René Doyon; Gaspard Duchene; Michael P. Fitzgerald; Katherine B. Follette; Alexandra Z. Greenbaum; Pascale Hibon; Li Wei Hung; Patrick Ingraham; Paul Kalas; Quinn Konopacky; James E. Larkin; Jérôme Maire; Franck Marchis; Mark S. Marley; Christian Marois; Stanimir Metchev; Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer
41^{+35}_{-12}