Event Title

BinCat: A Catalog of Nearby Binary Stars with Tools for Calculating Light-Leakage for Direct Imaging Mission

Presenter Information

Elias Holte

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Location

Clifford Hall, Room 210

Document Type

presentation

Start Date

8-5-2018 11:45 AM

End Date

8-5-2018 12:00 PM

Description

Binary stars have been largely left out of direct imaging surveys for exoplanets, specifically for earth-sized planets in their star’s habitable zone. Utilizing new direct imaging techniques brings us closer to being able to detect earth like exoplanets around binary stars. In preparation for the upcoming WFIRST mission and other direct imaging-capable missions (HabEx, LUVIOR) it is important to understand the expected science yield resulting from the implementation of these imaging techniques. BinCat is a catalog of binary systems within 30 parsecs to be used as a target list for future direct imaging missions. There is a non-static component along with BinCat that allows researchers to predict the expected light-leakage between a binary component and its o↵-axis companion (a value critical to the aforementioned techniques) at any epoch. This is accomplished by using orbital elements from the Sixth Orbital Catalog to model the orbits of the binaries. The software was validated against the historical data used to generate the orbital parameters. When orbital information is unknown or the binaries are purely optical the proper motion of the pair taken from the Washington Double Star catalog is integrated in time to estimate expected light-leakage.

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May 8th, 11:45 AM May 8th, 12:00 PM

BinCat: A Catalog of Nearby Binary Stars with Tools for Calculating Light-Leakage for Direct Imaging Mission

Clifford Hall, Room 210

Binary stars have been largely left out of direct imaging surveys for exoplanets, specifically for earth-sized planets in their star’s habitable zone. Utilizing new direct imaging techniques brings us closer to being able to detect earth like exoplanets around binary stars. In preparation for the upcoming WFIRST mission and other direct imaging-capable missions (HabEx, LUVIOR) it is important to understand the expected science yield resulting from the implementation of these imaging techniques. BinCat is a catalog of binary systems within 30 parsecs to be used as a target list for future direct imaging missions. There is a non-static component along with BinCat that allows researchers to predict the expected light-leakage between a binary component and its o↵-axis companion (a value critical to the aforementioned techniques) at any epoch. This is accomplished by using orbital elements from the Sixth Orbital Catalog to model the orbits of the binaries. The software was validated against the historical data used to generate the orbital parameters. When orbital information is unknown or the binaries are purely optical the proper motion of the pair taken from the Washington Double Star catalog is integrated in time to estimate expected light-leakage.