ВНИМАНИЕ! На форуме начался конкурс - астрофотография месяца НОЯБРЬ!
0 Пользователей и 1 Гость просматривают эту тему.
Цитата: anovikov от 12 Мар 2013 [19:59:49]А бурый карлик и коричневый карлик - одно и то же?Да.бурый карлик-это оборзевший коричневый карлик...)))
А бурый карлик и коричневый карлик - одно и то же?
карту поверхности по фотометрии
Благодаря измерению доплеровского сдвига стало возможным "развернуть" вращающийся точечный источник по 2 измерениям.
Составили карту поверхности по фотометрии для более тусклого из пары в ближнем ИК.
Spitzer Space Telescope - Directors Discretionary Time Proposal #10168Characterizing Our 4th Closest Neighbor and the Coldest Known Brown DwarfPrincipal Investigator: Kevin LuhmanInstitution: Penn State UniversityTechnical Contact: Kevin Luhman, Penn State UniversityCo-Investigators:Taran Esplin, Penn State UniversityScience Category: brown dwarfs/low mass starsObserving Modes: IRAC Post-Cryo MappingHours Approved: 2.2Abstract:We have conducted a search for high proper motion brown dwarfs using multi-epoch all-sky mid-infrared images from the WISE satellite. Through this work, we have discovered an object with a parallactic distance of 2.2 pc and a temperature of 250 K, making it the 4th closest neighbor of the Sun, and the coldest known brown dwarf. Because of its extreme proximity and temperature, it represents an unparallaled laboratory for studying planet-like atmospheres in an unexplored temperature regime. We propose to use IRAC on Spitzer to 1) improve the accuracy of the parallax measurement, and thus better constrain its absolute magnitudes and temperature, 2) search for widely separated companions to this object, which would have even colder temperatures.
The 58 AllWISE motion candidates lacking counterparts in 2MASS and other earlier surveys are listed in Table 4. Sixty percent of the objects in this table (35 out of 58) are believed to be flux transients based on their blue W1-W2 colors and appearance on the WISE All- Sky Release and AllWISE Release Atlas Images. These objects are slightly fainter versions of objects clearly seen in the W1 individual frames at one, and only one, WISE epoch, but because of their faintness, the variability cannot be conrmed by eye using the individual frames.Most of the remaining forty percent of the objects may or may not be real motion objects. One of these, WISEA J085510.74-071442.5, was also found by Luhman (2014), and the AllWISE motion values of -4188+/-267 and 226+/-283 mas yr-1 in RA and Dec, respectively, match well with his measures of -4800+/-300 and 500+/-300 mas yr-1 as expected, since these motions are derived from the same data set. Visual inspection of the individual frames also strongly suggests a large motion between the two WISE epochs, but we nonetheless list this source as unconrmed pending a third-epoch verication.
WISEA J085510.74-071442.5: This object is 28'' from the radio source 3C 209, which has the identifier WISEA J085509.46-071502.9. Although the WISE imaging data show a clear photocentric shift between the two epochs of data, additional imaging is needed to confirm the motion measure.