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TOPIC: Beta Pictoris


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Title: A 5 Micron Image of beta Pictoris b at a Sub-Jupiter Projected Separation: Evidence for a Misalignment Between the Planet and the Inner, Warped Disk
Authors: Thayne Currie, Christian Thalmann, Soko Matsumura, Nikku Madhusudhan, Adam Burrows, Marc Kuchner

We present and analyse a new M' detection of the young exoplanet beta Pictoris b from 2008 VLT/NaCo data at a separation of ~ 4 AU and a high signal-to-noise rereduction of L' data taken in December 2009. Based on our orbital analysis, the planet's orbit is viewed almost perfectly edge-on (i ~ 89 degrees) and has a Saturn-like semimajor axis of 9.55 (+3.46, -2.37) AU. Intriguingly, the planet's orbit is aligned with the major axis of the outer disk (Omega ~ 31 degrees) but probably misaligned with the warp/inclined disk at 50 AU often cited as a signpost for the planet's existence. Our results motivate new studies to determine exactly how \beta Pic b sculpts debris disk structures and whether a second planet is required to explain the warp/inclined disk.

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New observations of the giant planet orbiting Beta Pictoris

Astronomy & Astrophysics is publishing new observations of the giant planet around Pictoris. Discovered in 2009, this planet, called Beta Pictoris b, has now been detected again with the NaCo instrument on the VLT. Astronomers find that the planet is moving around the star. They have also measured the mass and the effective temperature of Beta Pic b.

Astronomy & Astrophysics publishes new high angular resolution observations of the giant planet orbiting the star Beta Pictoris. Located at 63.4 light-years from the Sun, Pic is a very young star of about 12 million years old , which is 75% more massive than our Sun. Pic is well known for harbouring an extended and structured circumstellar disk. It was actually the first star to have its disk directly imaged more than 25 years ago. In 2009, a giant planet was seen orbiting within the disk. With an orbital distance of 8 to 15 astronomical units (AU), Beta Pictoris b is the closest exoplanet to its star that has ever been imaged. This planet offers a new opportunity to study the planetary formation processes, in particular the interactions between the planets and their native disks.

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High angular resolution detection of Beta Pictoris b at 2.18 µm
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Title: Millimeter Imaging of the beta Pictoris Debris Disk: Evidence for a Planetesimal Belt
Authors: David J. Wilner (1), Sean M. Andrews (1), A. Meredith Hughes (2) ((1) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, (2) University of California, Berkeley)

We present observations at 1.3 millimetres wavelength of the beta Pictoris debris disk with beam size 4.3 x 2.6 arcsec (83 x 50 AU) from the Submillimeter Array. The emission shows two peaks separated by ~7 arsec along the disk plane, which we interpret as a highly inclined dust ring or belt. A simple model constrains the belt center to 94±8 AU, close to the prominent break in slope of the optical scattered light. We identify this region as the location as the main reservoir of dust producing planetesimals in the disk.

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Telescope optics: Exoplanet hunters develop apodizing phase-plate coronagraph

Using an apodizing phase-plate (APP) coronagraph developed at the University of Arizona's (UA's) Steward Observatory, astronomers have obtained images of a planet in a much closer orbit around its parent star than any other extrasolar planet previously found.
Installed on the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT; Paranal Mountain, Chile), the coronograph allowed the scientists to confirm the existence and orbital movement of Beta Pictoris b, a planet about seven to ten times the mass of Jupiter, around its parent star Beta Pictoris, 63 light years away (see figure). The APP has an intricate phase pattern etched into it, which has the effect of blocking out the central starlight in a very defined way, allowing exoplanets to show up in the image.

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Exoplanet Caught on the Move

For the first time, astronomers have been able to directly follow the motion of an exoplanet as it moves from one side of its host star to the other. The planet has the smallest orbit so far of all directly imaged exoplanets, lying almost as close to its parent star as Saturn is to the Sun. Scientists believe that it may have formed in a similar way to the giant planets in the Solar System. Because the star is so young, this discovery proves that gas giant planets can form within discs in only a few million years, a short time in cosmic terms.
Only 12 million years old, or less than three-thousandths of the age of the Sun, Beta Pictoris is 75% more massive than our parent star. It is located about 60 light-years away towards the constellation of Pictor (the Painter) and is one of the best-known examples of a star surrounded by a dusty debris disc. Earlier observations showed a warp of the disc, a secondary inclined disc and comets falling onto the star.

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Beta Pictoris : la course d'une exoplanète autour de son étoile

La planète orbite autour de son étoile à une distance semblable à celle de Saturne au Soleil. Cette exoplanète, de neuf fois la masse de Jupiter, pourrait s'être formée de la même manière que les planètes géantes de notre Système solaire. Plusieurs images ont été obtenues, de 2003 à 2009, par une équipe internationale[1] pilotée par des chercheurs du Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Grenoble (CNRS, Université Joseph Fourier, OSUG/INSU) et comprenant des chercheurs du Laboratoire d'Etudes Spatiales et d'Instrumentation en Astrophysique (LESIA ; Observatoire de Paris, CNRS, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Université Paris Diderot). Pour ce faire, ils ont utilisé le système d'optique adaptative NACO du Very Large Telescope de l'ESO. Ce résultat prouve que les planètes géantes peuvent se former dans des disques de matière en seulement quelques millions d'années, une durée très brève comparée au temps cosmique. A paraître en ligne dans Science Express, le jeudi 10 juin 2010.
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Title: The Pictoris disk imaged by Herschel PACS and SPIRE
Authors: B.Vandenbussche, B. Sibthorpe, B. Acke, E. Pantin, G. Olofsson, C. Waelkens, C. Dominik, M. J. Barlow, J.A.D.L. Blommaert, J. Bouwman, A.Brandeker, M.Cohen, W. DeMeester, W.R. F.Dent, K. Exter, J.Di Francesco, M. Fridlund, W.K.Gear, A.M.Glauser, H. L.Gomez, J. S.Greaves, P. C.Hargrave, P.M.Harvey, Th.Henning, A.M.Heras, M.R.Hogerheijde, W. S.Holland, R.Huygen, R. J. Ivison, C. Jean, S. J. Leeks, T. L. Lim, R. Liseau, B.C. Matthews, D.A. Naylor, G. L. Pilbratt, E. T. Polehampton, S. Regibo, P. Royer, A. Sicilia-Aguilar, B.M. Swinyard, H. J.Walker, R.Wesson

We obtained Herschel PACS and SPIRE images of the thermal emission of the debris disk around the A5V star \beta Pic. The disk is well resolved in the PACS filters at 70, 100, and 160 {\mu}m. The surface brightness profiles between 70 and 160 {\mu}m show no significant asymmetries along the disk, and are compatible with 90% of the emission between 70 and 160 {\mu}m originating in a region closer than 200 AU to the star. Although only marginally resolving the debris disk, the maps obtained in the SPIRE 250 - 500 {\mu}m filters provide full-disk photometry, completing the SED over a few octaves in wavelength that had been previously inaccessible. The small far-infrared spectral index ({\beta} = 0.34) indicates that the grain size distribution in the inner disk (<200AU) is inconsistent with a local collisional equilibrium. The size distribution is either modified by non-equilibrium effects, or exhibits a wavy pattern, caused by an under-abundance of impactors which have been removed by radiation pressure.

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A team of French astronomers using ESO's Very Large Telescope have discovered an object located very close to the star Beta Pictoris, and which apparently lies inside its disc. With a projected distance from the star of only 8 times the Earth-Sun distance, this object is most likely the giant planet suspected from the peculiar shape of the disc and the previously observed infall of comets onto the star. It would then be the first image of a planet that is as close to its host star as Saturn is to the Sun.

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