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Galactic Science: Star and Planet Formation Michael Liu Andrea Ghez, Tom Greene, Lynne Hillenbrand, Jessica Lu, Bruce Macintosh, Stan Metchev, Nevin Weinberg Keck SSC meeting, June 2006 Galactic Science: Key Science Cases 1. Extrasolar Planets (Liu, Macintosh) 2. Debris Disks (Metchev, Liu) 3. Protostars (Hillenbrand, Greene) 4. Galactic Center (Weinberg, Ghez, Lu) M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 2 AO is critical for star/planet formation There are/will be numerous wide-field surveys of the sky for finding young stars of various ages: IRAS, Hipparcos, Chandra, Spitzer, JCMT/SCUBA-2, Pan-STARRS, etc. Follow-up observations of the relevant physical scales are <1 arcsec: angular resolution & high contrast are critical M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) NGC 1333: 34’x26’ Spitzer/IRAC 3 Why do we need NGAO? • Very high-contrast near-IR imaging directly image planets and debris disks • Large sky coverage study stars over a very wide range of masses & ages • Multi-band optical and IR wavelengths determine properties & evolution of circumstellar material M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 4 Obligatory star & planet formation slide M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 5 Obligatory star & planet formation slide M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 6 Resolving the protostellar environment = + Disk+Envelope Density Temperature Dist. Use observed integrated-light SEDs + high resolution images to study the evolution of the youngest stars. M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 7 NGAO optical imaging of protostars • Simulated I-band (scattered light) image of a protostar with a massive envelope & disk at 1 kpc Model image HST ACS/HRC Keck NGAO (70 AU resolution) (25 AU resolution) NGAO provides highest angular resolution of any filled-aperture telescope (and complementary to ALMA for this science). M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 8 Obligatory star & planet formation slide M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 9 Debris Disks: Extrasolar analogs to the asteroid & Kuiper Belt Keck NGS: H-band Resolved disks are a goldmine for studying: • structure • composition • evolution • low-mass planets 100’s of these known from integrated light, but only ~12 resolved to date (2 by AO). M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 10 Debris disks studies with NGAO simulated 3-hour H-band integration of massive Kuiper Belt in the Pleiades (120 Myr, 130 pc) Solar system model Undetectable Neptune with 1:1 resonant dust ring High Strehl NGAO Keck AO today NGAO could image many (10s-100s) analogs to the young solar system, study other Kuiper Belts & low-mass planets M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 11 Obligatory star & planet formation slide M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 12 Planets around VLM stars & brown dwarfs ~25 MJup ~5 MJup? Chauvin et al (2005): VLT AO (IR WFS) • Direct imaging and spectroscopy of planets easier around low-mass stars and brown dwarfs. • Study objects with SEDs & atmospheres similar to “regular” exoplanets, but perhaps with diff origin. • High contrast LGS + IR tiptilt needed. M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 13 NGAO: Planet detection sensitivity • Very high contrast in near-IR enables imaging of Jovianmass planets around low-mass stars and brown dwarfs. • This can only be done by NGAO. The stars are too optically faint for ExAO systems (I<8-9). • A unique avenue for testing planet formation models, by using a wide range of stellar host mass. M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 14 NGAO opens a unique realm for high contrast studies for a broad range of science programs. AO system Contrast Extreme AO v.bright stars only 107–108 Keck NGAO 105–106 many targets M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 15 Why do we need NGAO? • Very high-contrast near-IR imaging directly image planets and debris disks • Large sky coverage study stars over a very wide range of masses & ages • Multi-band optical and IR wavelengths determine properties & evolution of circumstellar material M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 16 The End M. Liu (IfA/Hawaii) 17