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The Devil’s in the Details Transits in detail Telescopes

The Devil’s in the Details

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The Devil’s in the Details. Transits in detail Telescopes. Last time…. Radial velocity Measures Doppler shift Planet’s mass Must be in line-of-sight of observer Need a large telescope for high-precision measurements 1 m/s ~ 1 Earth-sized planet, need 6 m class telescope Transit - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Devil’s in the Details

The Devil’s in the Details

Transits in detailTelescopes

Page 2: The Devil’s in the Details

Last time….

• Radial velocity– Measures Doppler shift– Planet’s mass– Must be in line-of-sight of observer– Need a large telescope for high-precision measurements

• 1 m/s ~ 1 Earth-sized planet, need 6 m class telescope

• Transit– Measures drop in light as planet moves in front of or behind host

star– Planet’s radius– Must be in line-of-sight of observer– Can do with a relatively small telescope

Page 3: The Devil’s in the Details

Transit

• What is it measuring?

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Transit

• The atmosphere + the planet’s disk

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Transit

• The atmosphere + the planet’s optically-thick disk

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Transit

• The atmosphere + the planet’s optically-thick disk

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Transit

• Amount of atmospheric absorption will change with wavelength

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Transit

• Amount of atmospheric absorption will change with wavelength

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Transit

• So a planet’s radius will change with wavelength due to absorption by different molecules in its atmosphere

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So….

• If we measure the transit of an exoplanet at different wavelengths…– We can measure how its radius varies with

wavelength– Indicates its atmospheric structure and content• Atmospheric structure = how temperature varies with

altitude• Atmospheric content = what molecules are present

Page 11: The Devil’s in the Details

Example!

• Detection of H2 scattering

Zellem et al. (in prep.)

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Example!

• Detection of H2 scattering

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Another Example!

• Detection of water, methane, and carbon dioxide in a hot Jupiter’s atmosphere

Swain et al. (2009)

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Measuring radii at the 61”

• Planet has same signature in the infrared (IR) despite differing atmospheric contents

• Signal very different in the optical

Benneke & Seager (2013)

Page 15: The Devil’s in the Details

Why are the IR signatures the same?

• In the IR, a small planet with a thick atmosphere can block as much light as a large planet with a small atmosphere– Hot Jupiter atmospheres are opaque in the IR

Page 16: The Devil’s in the Details

Why are the IR signatures the same?

• In the IR, a small planet with a thick atmosphere can block as much light as a large planet with a small atmosphere– Hot Jupiter atmospheres are opaque in the IR

=

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However, not the same in the visible

• In the visible, the planet’s atmosphere is now transparent, so a small planet will look different than a large one

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However, not the same in the visible

• In the visible, the planet’s atmosphere is now transparent, so a small planet will look different than a large one

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Rob does spectroscopy magic

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Measuring radii at the 61”

• Planet has same signature in the infrared (IR) despite differing atmospheric contents

• Signal very different in the optical

Benneke & Seager (2013)

Page 21: The Devil’s in the Details
Page 22: The Devil’s in the Details

Telescopes

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History

• First telescopes were refractors in the Netherlands in 1608

• Galileo heard about them in 1609 and built his own– First person to point

towards the heavens– Discovered craters on

Moon, moons of Jupiter, Saturn’s rings

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Refractors vs. Reflectors

• Refractor: objective lens on front refracts (focuses) light at the back end of the telescope– Lens can obscure

image– Very long focal

length, so telescope itself is long

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Refractors vs. Reflectors

• Reflector: primary mirror reflects light to a focal point– No more lens– Can reflect the image

back on itself, makes shorter focal length and telescope

– Developed by Newton in 1680

• Most professional telescopes today are reflectors

Schmidt-Cassegrain design

Page 26: The Devil’s in the Details

What is the 61”?

• Reflector or refractor?

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What is the 61”?

• Light comes in the dome, hits primary mirror

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What is the 61”?

• Reflected off of primary mirror and focused on secondary mirror

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What is the 61”?

• Light reflects off of secondary mirror and is focused on detector

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What is the 61”?

• REFLECTOR

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Next time….

• Learn about instrumentation used to collect data– CCDs– Spectrographs

• Start learning how we will reduce telescopic data

Page 32: The Devil’s in the Details

Calendar

• Next class: Friday October 24• Field trips!– Visit the 61” on Mount Bigelow• Afternoon of Saturday November 1• Limited space for those who want to stick around

through the night to help observe• Will need people willing to help drive/carpool up the

mountain

– Mirror Lab Tour• Friday November 14 from 4-5 PM