Joint AAO/ANTF Colloquium.
Tuesday 6th May 2008 - 3:30pm ATNF Lecture theatre
Exploring Low Mass Stars, Brown Dwarfs and Exoplanets with Adaptive
Optics and Precision Radial Velocities
Jamie lloyd Cornell, USA.
Abstract:
I will describe recent work on high contrast imaging and radial
velocities for the characterization of companions to low mass stars,
M dwarfs. TEDI (TripleSpec - Exoplanet Discovery Instrument) is a
dedicated instrument for near infrared radial velocity searches for
planetary companions to low-mass stars with the goal of achieving
meters per second radial velocity precision. Heretofore, such planet
searches have been limited almost entirely to the optical band and to
stars that are bright in this band. Consequently, knowledge about
planetary companions to the populous but visibly-faint low mass stars
is limited. Current radial velocity searches for planets around
early M dwarfs with visible wavelength spectrometers have already
yielded remarkable discoveries. The extension of this capability to
longer wavelengths opens up new opportunities in numerous mid-late M-dwarfs
and even brown dwarfs. TEDI has been commissioned on the
Palomar 200" telescope in December 2007, and is currently in a science
verification phase. Ultimately, direct detection of exoplanets will
require significant progress in the high contrast imaging. I will
describe a novel experiment in adaptive optics aperture masking
interferometry on the Palomar 200" that has been used to measure
dynamical masses and luminosities of low luminosity objects. In near
future, improvements in the adaptive optics aperture masking technique
will enable the detection of proto-planets in nearby starforming
regions and the direct detection of super-jupiters around nearby young
stars.
|