• Title/Summary/Keyword: and photometry

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Post-outburst observation of HBC722 in Pelican nebula

  • Yang, Yuna;Park, Won-Kee;Sung, Hyunil;Lee, Sanggak;Yoon, Tae-Seog;Lee, Jeongeun;Kang, Wonseok;Park, Keunhong;Cho, Dong-Hwan
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.59.1-59.1
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    • 2013
  • HBC722 (also known as LkHa 188-G4 and PTF 10qpf; A. Miller et al., 2011) is one of the FU Orionis-like young stellar objects which outbursted in August 2010 (Semkov et al., 2010). We have been monitoring the post-outburst phase of this object since November 2010 with Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute Near Infrared Camera System (KASINICS), at Bohyunsan Optical Astronomy Observatory (BOAO). Four filters, J, H, Ks, and H2 band, were used for this observation. We did aperture photometry to find photometric variation. The light curve shows a long period brightness change. After decrease of the brightness, which was reported at the KAS 2011 fall meeting, HBC722 brightens up slowly now. However we cannot confirm any short period variations, previously reported by Green et al (2013), due to large scatters in the obtained light curve.

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EFFICIENT PERIOD SEARCH FOR TIME SERIES PHOTOMETRY

  • SHIN MIN-SU;BYUN YONG-IK
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.79-85
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    • 2004
  • We developed an algorithm to identify and determine periods of variable sources. With its robustness and high speed, it is expected to become an useful tool for surveys with large volume of data. This new scheme consists of an initial coarse. process of finding several candidate periods followed by a secondary process of much finer period search. With this multi-step approach, best candidates among statistically possible periods are produced without human supervision and also without any prior assumption on the nature of the variable star in question. We tested our algorithm with 381 stars taken from the ASAS survey and the result is encouraging. In about $76\%$ cases, our results are nearly identical as their published periods. Our algorithm failed to provide convincing periods for only about $10\%$ cases. For the remaining $14\%$, our results significantly differ from their periods. We show that, in many of these cases, our periods are superior and much closer to the true periods. However, the existence of failures, and also periods sometimes worse than manually controlled results, indicates that this algorithm needs further improvement. Nevertheless, the present experiment shows that this is a positive step toward a fully automated period analysis for future variability surveys.

A likely exoplanet around F5 supergiant ${\alpha}$ Persei near the Cepheid instability strip

  • Lee, Byeong-Cheol;Han, In-Woo;Park, Myeong-Gu;Kim, Kang-Min
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.28.2-28.2
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    • 2011
  • To search for and study the nature of the long-periodic variations of massive stars, we have been carrying out a precise radial velocity (RV) survey for supergiants. Here, we present high-resolution RV measurements of ${\alpha}$ Per which lies near the Cepheid instability strip from November 2005 to February 2011 using the fiber-fed Bohyunsan Observatory Echelle Spectrograph (BOES) at Bohyunsan Optical Astronomy Observatory (BOAO). The orbital solution yields a period of 129 days, a 2K amplitude of 80 m/s, and an eccentricity of 0.1. Assuming a possible stellar mass of 7.3 $M{\bigodot}$, we estimate the minimum mass for the planetary companion to be 7.5 MJup with the orbital semi-major axis of 0.97 AU. We do not find the correlation between RV variations and chromospheric activity indicator (Ca II H & K region). The Hipparcos photometry and bisector velocity span (BVS) do not show any obvious correlations with RV variations. These analyses suggest that ${\alpha}$ Per is a pulsating supergiant that hosts an exoplanet. If the 129 days variations of ${\alpha}$ Per do not come from an exoplanet but Cepheid-like pulsations, the theoretical boundary of the Cepheid instability strip may need to be extended to the bluer side.

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SPECTRA OF CHROMOSPHERICALLY ACTIVE STARS (채층 활동이 강한 별들의 분광선)

  • KANG YOUNG WOON;KIM HOIL;LEE WOO BAIK;OH KYU DONG
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.15 no.spc1
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    • pp.93-102
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    • 2000
  • We have reviewed the magnetic activity in close binaries. Solar like magnetic activity indicators such as photometric spots, chromo spheric emission, coronal X-ray and radio emission, and flare activity are commonplace in many cool stars with convective envelopes. Using the UV spectra we confirmed the strength of stellar activity increases with more rapid rotation and later spectral types which corresponds to the increasing depth of the star's convective envelope. Apart from very young stellar objects such as T Tauri stars, the stars with the highest levels of activity are close binary systems composed of cool stars, i.e., the chromospherically active binaries such as RS CVn, BY Dra, W UMa and related systems. The IUE low and high dispersion spectra of V711 Tau, VW Cep and SW Lac are used for ultraviolet photometry and for a variation study of chromospheric activity. Evidence of chromospherically activity is indicated by the intensity variation of the Mg II emission line with orbital phase.

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A planetary companion around K-giant ${\varepsilon}$ Corona Borealis

  • Lee, Byeong-Cheol;Han, In-Woo;Park, Myeong-Gu;Mkrtichian, David E.;Kim, Kang-Min
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.37 no.1
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    • pp.77.1-77.1
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    • 2012
  • We present high-resolution radial velocity measurements of K2 giant ${\varepsilon}$ CrB from February 2005 to January 2012 using the fiber-fed Bohyunsan Observatory Echelle Spectrograph at Bohyunsan Optical Astronomy Observatory. We find that the RV measurements for ${\varepsilon}$ CrB exhibit a periodic variation of 418 days with a semi-amplitude of 129 m/s. There is no correlation with RV measurements and inhomogeneous surface features by examining chromospheric activity indicator (Ca II H region), the Hipparcos photometry, and bisector velocity span. Thus, Keplerian motion is the most likely explanation, which suggests that the RV variations arise from an orbital motion. Assuming a possible stellar mass of 1.7 $M_{\odot}$, for ${\varepsilon}$ CrB, we obtain a minimum mass for the planetary companion of 6.7 $M_{Jup}$ with an orbital semi-major axis of 1.3 AU, and an eccentricity of 0.11. We support that more massive stars harbor more massive planetary companions in giant hosting planetary companions (Dollinger et al. 2009), as well as, we discuss the frequency of detected planetary companions with the metallicity distribution in giant (Pasquini et al. 2007; Quirrenbach et al. 2011).

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A Y-BAND LOOK OF THE SKY WITH 1-M CLASS TELESCOPES

  • Choi, Chang-Su;Im, Myung-Shin;Jeon, Yi-Seul;Ibrahimov, Mansur
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.45 no.1
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    • pp.7-17
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    • 2012
  • Y-band is a broad passband that is centered at ~1 ${\mu}m$. It is becoming a new, popular window for extragalactic study especially for observations of red objects thanks to recent CCD technology developments. In order to better understand the general characteristics of objects in Y-band, and to investigate the promise of Y-band observations with small telescopes, we carried out imaging observations of several extragalactic fields, brown dwarfs, and high redshift quasars with Y-band filter at the Mt. Lemmon Optical Astronomy Observatory and the Maidanak observatory. From our observations, we constrain the bright end of the galaxy and the stellar number counts in Y-band. We also test the usefulness of high redshift quasar (z >6) selection via i - z - Y color-color diagram, to demonstrate that the i - z - Y color-color diagram is effective for the selection of high redshift quasars even with a conventional optical CCD camera installed at a 1-m class telescope.

Orbital stability study and transit-timing variations of the extrasolar planetary system: K2-3

  • Choi, Beom-Kyu;Hinse, Tobias C.;Yoon, Tae Seog
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.41 no.1
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    • pp.79.1-79.1
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    • 2016
  • We investigated the dynamical properties of the K2-3 multi-planet system. Recently three transiting planets are discovered using the extended Kepler2 (K2) mission (Crossfield et al. 2015). We extended their preliminary stability study by considering a substantial longer integration time. Since planet mass is not known from photometry we calculated exoplanets masses using empirical mass-radius relations (Weiss & Marcy 2014). Forward numerical integration was done using the MERCURY integration package (Chambers 1999). Our results demonstrate that this system is stable over a time scale of $10^8years$. Furthermore, we investigated the dynamical effects of a hypothetical planet in the semi-major axis vs eccentricity space. For stable orbits of the hypothetical planet we calculated transit-timing variation (TTV) and radial velocity signals. We find that for a hypothetical perturber with mass 1-13 Mjup, semi-major axis 0.2 - 0.8 AU and eccentricity 0.00-0.47 the following timing signals for the planet K2-3 b is ~ 5 sec, K2-3 c is ~ 130 sec and for K2-3 d is ~ 190 sec. The radial velocity signal of the hypothetical planet is ~ 4 m/s. Using typical transit-timing errors from the K2 mission, we find that the above hypothetical planet would not be detectable. Its radial velocity signal, however, would be detectable using the APF 2.4m telescope or HARPS at the ESO/La Silla Observatory in Chile.

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Variable Blue Stragglers in the Metal-Poor Globular Clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud - Hodge 11 and NGC1466

  • Yang, Soung-Chul;Bhardwaj, Anupam
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.46 no.1
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    • pp.35.2-35.2
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    • 2021
  • Blue straggler stars (BSs) are "rejuvenated" main sequence stars first recognized by Allan Sandage from his observation of the prominent northern globular cluster M3 in the year of 1953. BSs are now known to be present in diverse stellar environments including open clusters, globular clusters, dwarf galaxies, and even the field populations of the Milky Way. This makes them a very useful tool in a wide range of astrophysical applications: Particularly BSs are considered to have a crucial role in the evolution of stellar clusters because they affect on the dynamics, the binary population, and the history of the stellar evolution of the cluster they belong to. Here we report a part of the preliminary results from our ongoing research on the BSs in the two metal-poor globular clusters (GCs) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), Hodge 11 and NGC1466. Using the high precision multi-band images obtained with the Advanced Camera for Survey (ACS) onboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), we extract time-series photometry to search for the signal of periodic variations in the luminosity of the BSs. Our preliminary results confirm that several BSs are intrinsic "short period (0.05 < P < 0.25 days)" variable stars with either pulsating or eclipsing types. We will discuss our investigation on the properties of those variable BS candidates in the context of the formation channels of these exotic main sequence stars, and their roles in the dynamical evolution of the host star clusters.

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The Photometric Brightness Variation of Geostationary Orbit Satellite

  • Seo, Haingja;Jin, Ho;Song, Yongjun;Lee, Yongseok;Oh, Youngseok
    • Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences
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    • v.30 no.3
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    • pp.179-185
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    • 2013
  • Photometric observation is one of the most effective techniques for determining the physical characteristics of unknown space objects and space debris. In this research, we examine the change in brightness of the Communication, Ocean, Meteorological Satellite-1 (COMS-1) Geostationary Orbit Satellite (GEO), and compare it to our estimate model. First, we calculate the maximum brightness time using our calculation method and then derive the light curve shape using our rendering model. The maximum brightness is then calculated using the induced equation from Pogson's formula. For a comparison with our estimation, we carried out photometric observation using an optical telescope. The variation in brightness and the shape of the light curve are similar to the calculations achieved using our model, but the maximum brightness shows a slightly different value from our calculation result depending on the input parameters. This paper examines the photometric phenomenon of the variation in brightness of a GEO satellite, and the implementation of our approach to understanding the characteristics of space objects.

A MULTI-WAVELENGTH STUDY OF PAH-SELECTED STARBURST GALAXIES

  • Takagi, T.;Matsuhara, H.;Wada, T.;Ohyama, Y.;Oyabu, S.
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.321-324
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    • 2012
  • Using extensive mid-IR datasets from AKARI, i.e. 9-band photometry covering the wavelength range from $2{\mu}m$ to $24{\mu}m$ and the unbiased spectroscopic survey for sources with $S_{\nu}$($9{\mu}m$)>0.3 mJy, we study starburst galaxies specifically at the redshift of z ~ 0.5, whose mid-IR spectra are clearly dominated by the PAH emission features. PAH-selected galaxies, selected with extremely red mid-IR colour due to PAHs, have high rest-frame PAH-to-stellar luminosity ratios, comparable to those in the most active regions in nearby starburst galaxies. Thus, they seem to have active starburst regions spreading over the whole body. Furthermore, some of PAH-selected galaxies are found to have peculiar rest-frame 11-to-$8{\mu}m$ flux ratios, which is systematically smaller than nearby starburst/AGN spectral templates. This may indicate a systematic difference in the physical condition of ISM between nearby and distant starburst galaxies.