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Astronomy 3040 Astrobiology Spring_2016 Day-7 Homework -1 Due Monday, Feb. 8 Chapter 2: 1, 3, 16 23, 24, 26 29, 30, 33 44 53, 54, 56 The appendices will be useful Project http://www.ulalaunch.com/docs/product_sheet/Delt aIVPayloadPlannersGuide2007.pdf This is the Delta-IV payload guide overview. 20MB. Planetary quarantine program. March 5, 2009 21:48:43 CST Stellar Mass (Sun=1) THE HABITABLE ZONE BY STELLAR TYPES • B0 10 • A0 1 • F0 • G0 • K0 • M0 Habitable Zone Solar System 0.1 10 100 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 Stellar Radii and Planetary Orbital Semi-Major Axis (A.U.) The Habitable Zone (HZ) in green is defined here (and often) as the distance from a star where liquid water is expected to exist on the planets surface (Kasting, Whitmire, and Reynolds 1993). 5 Kepler Mission 4 Methods Radial velocity shifts of the parent star Direct Imaging Gravitational Lensing Transits How do you Find Exo-Planets? Radial Velocity PROBING THE RIGHT SEARCH SPACE 10000 Orbital Period (years) 100 0.01 0.1 1 10 Solar planets pulsar planets Planetary Mass (M) 1000 Extrasolar Doppler 3m/s 100 10 1 0.1 0.01 0.1 1 10 Semi-major Axis (AU) 100 The first 50 known extrasolar planets are also shown along with the planets in our solar system. The limit for planet detection using Doppler spectroscopy is shown. The range of habitable planets (0.5 to 10 M) in the HZ is shown in green. 9 1st Direct IR Images 1st direct Optical Image A Transit USING PHOTOMETRY TO DETECT PLANETS • Transits Planet crosses line of sight between observer and star and blocks a small amount of light from the star Transit of Mercury in 2003 Transit of HD 209458 observed with HST 13 GEOMETRY FOR TRANSIT PROBABILITY Not all planetary orbits are aligned along our line of sight to a star D/2 Stellar Diameter Orbital radius d* 1) Range of Pole Positions = d* D/2 2d*/D 2 2) Solid angle of d*/D for all possible pole positions for any given LOS 3) Geometric Transit Probability = d*/D Diameter of Sun d* is about 0.01 AU. Diameter of Earth orbit D is 2 AU Random probability of detecting a Sun-Earth analog is about 0.5% So one needs to look at thousands of stars IF all have an Earth 14 PHOTOMETRY CAN DETECT EARTH-SIZED PLANETS • The relative change in brightness (DL/L) is equal to the relative areas (Aplanet/Astar) Jupiter: 1% area of the Sun (1/100) Earth or Venus 0.01% area of the Sun (1/10,000) • To measure 0.01% must get above the Earth’s atmosphere • This is also needed for getting a high duty cycle Method is robust but you must be patient: Require at least 3 transits, preferably 4 with same brightness change, duration and temporal separation (the first two establish a possible period, the third confirms it) 15 Kepler PHOTOMETER – Concept (it’s changed) Focal plane electronics 15 minute integrations Sunshade 42 CCDs read every 3 seconds 1.4 m diameter primary mirror 0.95 m diameter Schmidt corrector Focus mechanisms 105 sq deg FOV Focal plane assembly: CCDs, field flattening lenses fine guidance sensors Radiator and heat pipe for cooling focal plane Graphite cyanate structure Bandpass: 420-830 nm ; Exposures: 15 min (1 min asteroseismology mode) Focal plane and pointing stability are essential. Only 35-pixel “postage-stamps” are read out. Raw pixel data is sent down. 16 CONTINUOUSLY VIEWABLE HIGH DENSITY STAR FIELD One region of high star field density far (>55°) from the ecliptic plane where the galactic plane is continuously viewable is centered at RA=19 h45m Dec=35°. The 55° ecliptic plane avoidance limit is defined by the sunshade size for a large aperture wide field of view telescope in space. 17 FOV On the Sky Kepler Fields and Images Each of the 42 CCDs (2048x2048) samples 6 square degrees Image is de-focussed to FWHM ~6” EXTENDED SOLAR NEIGHBORHOOD The stars sampled are similar to the immediate solar neighborhood. Young stellar clusters, ionized HII regions and the neutral hydrogen, HI, distribution define the arms of the Galaxy. The view is from the north galactic pole looking down onto the galactic plane 21 Neighborhood Search Space Kepler Filter vs. BVRI vs. ugriz Star Formation - Chemistry Richard Rand, University of New Mexico Todd Boroson/NOAO/AURA/NSF Elemental Abundance Ages and Chemical Composition Ages come from main-sequence turnoff. Stars are mostly hydrogen and helium. Abundance of heavy elements is 0 – 3%. Heavy elements are made in massive stars. New heavy elements are ejected into space. New stars form with some heavy elements. Abundance of heavy elements records the history of star formation. Chemical Enrichment Effect of Metallicity