Issue |
A&A
Volume 518, July-August 2010
Herschel: the first science highlights
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | L131 | |
Number of page(s) | 5 | |
Section | Letters | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201014594 | |
Published online | 16 July 2010 |
Herschel: the first science highlights
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Cold DUst around NEarby Stars (DUNES). First results
A resolved exo-Kuiper belt around the solar-like star Ret
C. Eiroa1 - D. Fedele1,2,3 - J. Maldonado1 - B. M. González-García4 - J. Rodmann5 - A. M. Heras6 - G. L. Pilbratt6 - J.-Ch. Augereau7 - A. Mora8,1 - B. Montesinos9 - D. Ardila10 - G. Bryden11 - R. Liseau12 - K. Stapelfeldt11 - R. Launhardt2 - E. Solano9 - A. Bayo13 - O. Absil14 - M. Arévalo9 - D. Barrado9 - C. Beichmann15 - W. Danchi16 - C. del Burgo17 - S. Ertel31 - M. Fridlund6 - M. Fukagawa18 - R. Gutiérrez9 - E. Grün19 - I. Kamp20 - A. Krivov21 - J. Lebreton7 - T. Löhne21 - R. Lorente22 - J. Marshall23 - R. Martínez-Arnáiz24 - G. Meeus1 - D. Montes24 - A. Morbidelli25 - S. Müller21 - H. Mutschke21 - T. Nakagawa26 - G. Olofsson27 - I. Ribas28 - A. Roberge16 - J. Sanz-Forcada9 - P. Thébault29 - H. Walker30 - G. J. White23,30 - S. Wolf31
1 - Dpt. Física Teórica, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain
2 - Max-Planck Institut für Astronomie, Königstuhl 17, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
3 - John Hopkins University, Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, 3701 San Martin drive, Baltimore, MD 21210, USA
4 - INSA at ESAC, 28691 Villanueva de la Cañada, Madrid, Spain
5 - ESA Space Environment and Effects Section, ESTEC, PO Box 299, 2200 AG Noordwijk, The Netherlands
6 - ESA Astrophysics & Fundamental Physics Missions Division,
ESTEC/SRE-SA, Keplerlaan 1, 2201 AZ Noordwijk, The Netherlands
7 - Université Joseph Fourier/CNRS, Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Grenoble, UMR 5571, Grenoble, France
8 - ESA-ESAC Gaia SOC. PO Box
78, 28691 Villanueva de la Cañada, Madrid, Spain
9
- LAEX, Centro de Astrobiología (INTA-CSIC), LAEFF Campus, European
Space Astronomy Center (ESAC), PO Box 78, 28691 Villanueva de la
Cañada, Madrid, Spain
10 - NASA Herschel Science Center, California Institute of Technology, 1200 E. California Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
11 - Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109, USA
12 - Onsala Space Observatory, Chalmers University of Technology, Se-439 92 Onsala, Sweden
13 - European Space Observatory, Alonso de Cordova 3107, Vitacura Casilla 19001, Santiago 19, Chile
14 - Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique, Université de Liège, 17 Allée du Six Août, 4000 Sart Tilman, Belgium
15 - NASA ExoPlanet Science Institute California Inst. of Technology, 1200 E. California Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
16 - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Exoplanets and Stellar Astrophysics, Code 667, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA
17 - UNINOVA-CA3, Campus da Caparica, Quinta da Torre, Monte de Caparica,
2825-149 Caparica, Portugal
18 - Nagoya University, Japan
19 - Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Saupfercheckweg 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
20 - Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, Postbus 800, 9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands
21 - Astrophysikalisches Institut und Universitätssternwarte, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität,
Schillergäßchen 2-3, 07745 Jena, Germany
22 - Herschel Science Center, ESAC/ESA, PO BOX 78, 28691 Villanueva de la Cañada, Madrid, Spain
23 - Department of Physics and Astrophysics, Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK
24
- Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Facultad de Ciencias Físicas, Dpt.
Astrofísica, av. Complutense s/n. 28040 Madrid, Spain
25 - Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur, Boulevard de l'Observatoire, BP 4229, 06304 Nice Cedex 4, France
26
- Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS), Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency (JAXA), 3-1-1, Yoshinodai, Sagamihara, Kanagawa,
229-8510, Japan
27 - Department of Astronomy, Stockholm University, AlbaNova University Center, Roslagstullsbacken 21, 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
28
- Institut de Ciències de l'Espai (CSIC-IEEC), Campus UAB, Facultat de
Ciències, Torre C5, parell, 2a pl., 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain
29 - LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, 92195 Meudon, France
30 - Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Chilton OX11 0QX, UK
31 - Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Institut für
Theoretische Physik und Astrophysik, Leibnizstr. 15, 24098 Kiel, Germany
Received 31 March 2010 / Accepted 11 May 2010
Abstract
We present the first far-IR observations of the solar-type stars
Pav, HR 8501, 51 Peg and
Ret, taken within the context of the DUNES Herschel
open time key programme (OTKP). This project uses the PACS and SPIRE
instruments with the objective of studying infrared excesses due to
exo-Kuiper belts around nearby solar-type stars. The observed 100 m fluxes from
Pav, HR 8501, and 51 Peg agree with the predicted photospheric fluxes, excluding debris disks brighter than
(1
level) around those stars. A flattened, disk-like structure with a semi-major axis of 100 AU in size is detected around
Ret. The resolved structure suggests the presence of an eccentric dust ring, which we interpret as an exo-Kuiper belt with
.
Key words: stars: general - planetary system - space vehicles: instruments
1 Introduction
The discovery of infrared excess emission produced by cold, optically thin disks composed of micron-sized dust grains around main sequence stars is one of the main contributions of IRAS (Aumann et al. 1984). Since the lifetime of such grains, set by destructive collisions, Poynting-Robertson drag and radiation pressure, is much shorter than the ages of these stars, one must conclude that those dust disks - called debris disks - are continuously replenished by collisions of large rocky bodies (Backman & Paresce 1993). Observations of debris disks provide powerful diagnostics from which to learn about the dust content, its properties and its spatial distribution; in addition, since dust sensitively responds to the gravity of planets, it can be used as a tracer of the presence of planets. Thus, observations of debris disks around stars of different masses and ages inform us about the formation and evolution of planetary systems, since they are a direct proof for the existence of planetesimals and an indirect tracer of the presence of planets around stars.
In the Solar System, the asteroid and Kuiper belts are examples of debris systems; in particular, the Kuiper belt has an estimated dust luminosity -10-6 (Stern 1996). IRAS was only able to detect bright disks, , mainly around A and F stars; ISO extended our knowledge to a wider spectral type range and found a general decline with the stellar age (Habing et al. 2001; Decin et al. 2003). A remarkable step forward has been achieved by Spitzer, studying debris disks as faint as several times 10-6, their incidence from A to M type stars, the age distribution, the presence of planets, etc. (e.g. Su et al. 2006; Trilling et al. 2008; Bryden et al. 2009). Spitzer has, however, several limitations. Its poor spatial resolution prevent us from constraining fundamental disk parameters which require resolved imaging, and the confusion limit inherent in its large beam limits its detection capability to cold disks brighter than the Kuiper belt by around two orders of magnitude. Also, Spitzer is not sensitive longward of 70 m, wavelengths particularly important for the cold disks generally found around Sun-like stars. The far-infrared 3.5 m diameter Herschel space telescope (Pilbratt et al. 2010) with its instruments PACS (Poglistsch et al. 2010) and SPIRE (Griffin et al. 2010) overcomes these limitations, offering the possibility of characterising cold, 30 K, debris disks as faint as few times 10-7 with spatial resolution 30 AU at 10 pc, i.e., true extra-solar Kuiper belts.
DUNES is a Herschel OTKP designed to detect and characterize cold, faint, debris disks, i.e., extra-solar analogues to the Kuiper belt, around a statistically significant sample of main-sequence FGK nearby stars, taking advantage of the unique capabilities of Herschel with PACS and SPIRE. The data will be analysed with radiative, collisional and dynamical dust disk models. A complete description of DUNES goals, target selection, and stellar properties will be presented elsewhere (Eiroa et al., in prep.). The objectives of the DUNES survey are complementary to those of the OTKP DEBRIS (Matthews et al. 2010). Both projects have complementary star samples, sharing partly some sources and the corresponding data.
The DUNES objectives require the detection of very faint excesses at the mJy level, comparable to the photospheric emission and only a few times the measurement uncertainties. The primary observing strategy is designed to integrate for as long as needed to detect the 100 m photospheric flux, subject only to confusion noise limitations. In this letter we present our first results obtained during the science demonstration phase (SDP) of Herschel. Four solar-type G stars were observed: Ret, Pav, HR 8501, and 51 Peg. We also observed q1 Eri as a test object with a well-known, bright debris disk; the q1 Eri results are presented in an accompanying letter (Liseau et al. 2010). Excluding Pav, the rest of the stars are shared targets with DEBRIS.
2 Observations and data reduction
Table 1: Summary of the SDP DUNES observations.
The stars were observed with PACS at 70 m (blue), 100 m (green), and 160 m (red). Two observing modes were used - chop-nod/point-source (PS hereafter) and scan map (SM hereafter). Our data set allows us to make a direct comparison of both modes, specially in the cases of q1 Eri and Ret. A critical evaluation of this comparison will be the subject of a technical note. SM observations of Ret were carried out as DUNES routine observations. Table 1 gives some details of the observations including the identification number, the observing mode, the wavelength bands, the scan direction angles, and the total duration of the observation (OT).
Data reduction was carried out using the Herschel
interactive processing environment (HIPE), version v2.0.0 RC3, and the
pipeline script delivered at the December 2009 Herschel data reduction workshop, ESAC, Madrid, Spain. The script provides all the tools to convert pure raw PACS/Herschel data to flux calibrated and position rectified images. While the instrument pixel size is 3
2 for the blue and green bands and 6
4 for the red band, the resolution of the final images is set to 1
/pixel and
2
/pixel for the blue/green and red bands, respectively.
3 Results
3.1 Pav, HR 8501, 51 Peg
Table 2 gives J2000.0 equatorial coordinates of Pav, HR 8501 and 51 Peg at 100 m, as well as their optical positions. PACS positions are corrected from the proper motions of the stars. Differences between the optical and 100 m positions are within the uncertainties for Herschel pointing. Of the three stars, only Pav has been detected at 160 m.
Table 2: Equatorial coordinates, FWHM at 100 m, observed fluxes with 1 statistical errors ( ), and predicted photospheric fluxes ().
Figure 1: PACS results of Ret. Panels from left to right: 70 m, 100 m, and 160 m. Upper panel: field size is with East to the left and North up. Middle panels plot isocontours. Note that the field size is different from that displayed in the upper panels. The ``star'' symbol, position (0,0), corresponds to the optical star (Table 3). A segment indicating 120 AU is shown. Contours: 70 m: 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15, 24 , 100 m: 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 14 , 160 m: 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18 (1 values are indicated in the text). Lower panels: RA intensity profiles through the peak flux of Ret (solid line). For comparison, RA intensity profiles of the calibration star Bootis are also plotted (dashed lines), scaled to the peak flux of Ret (70 and 100 m) and Ret+PS-E (160 m). The Bootis profile is also scaled and superimposed to PS-E in the 100 m panel. |
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100 m FWHM values of Pav have been estimated using a 2-D Gaussian fit. This procedure did not produce reasonable results for HR 8501, perhaps due to the faintness of the star; in this case the FWHM has been estimated from intensity profiles along the RA and Dec directions. For 51 Peg, observed in PS mode, the FWHM estimate is also based on some additional point-like sources visible in the PACS field. The 100 m FWHM estimates are given in Table 2. The 160 m 2-D Gaussian fit for Pav gives , with conservative errors . These values and the elongated beam are consistent with the expected results for point sources (see the technical notes PICC-ME-TN-035/036 in http://herschel.esac.esa.int/AOTsReleaseStatus.shtml)
Aperture photometry has been used to estimate the flux of the stars. Table 2 gives fluxes and errors taking into account the correction factors indicated in the aforementioned technical notes. The sky noise was Jy/pixel and Jy/pixel for the 100 m SM data of Pav and HR 8501, respectively. The sky noise is considerably higher in the PS-mode 51 Peg image ( Jy/arcsec2) due to the very irregular background and presence of negative signals. The 160 m sky noise was Jy/pixel for the Pav data. The absolute calibration uncertainties are 10% in the blue and green bands and better than 20% in the red band.
3.2 Ret (HIP 15371)
Figure 1 shows the SM PACS images of Ret. An East-West oriented structure is seen at 70 and 100 m. It consists of two point-like flux peaks embedded in a faint, extended emission, which displays a secondary diffuse maximum at its Western side. Both point-like peaks have similar brightness in the green band, but the Eastern point-like peak is much fainter in the blue band. The two point-like sources are unresolved in the lower-resolution 160 m image; instead a single bright peak is observed at that position with a secondary maximum at the position of the 70/100 m Western diffuse emission.
Table 3 gives positions at 70 and 100 m of both point-like sources, and of the brightest 160 m peak; the optical position of Ret is also given for comparison. The brightest 70 m peak coincides with the optical position of the star within the Herschel pointing error; this result and the fact that its PACS 70 and 100 m fluxes are similar to the expected Ret photospheric fluxes (see below) lead us to identify this point-like PACS object with the optical star. There is a small shift between the 70 and 100 m positions of Ret, but we note that a similar shift is found for other field objects - a blue object very close to the Ret complex towards the South-West; and two red objects, one towards the Northwest and one towards the Northeast (see Fig. 1).
The middle panels of Fig. 1 show isocontour plots. The optical position of Ret is marked. 100 m and 160 m contours have been spatially shifted so that the peak positions of the mentioned field objects coincide in all three bands (those objects are not shown in the isocontour plots). The size of the whole structure changes with wavelength from in the blue to in the red band. East-West intensity profiles are shown in the bottom of Fig. 1, together with similar profiles of Bootis. The blue and green intensity profiles show the point-like character of Ret, as well as of the faint peak at the East, called PS-E hereafter; the profile in the red band also shows point-like behaviour for the brightest 160 m peak, Ret+PS-E in Fig. 1 and Table 3. The Western diffuse peak (``W'' in Fig. 1) appears very prominent in the green and red profiles, while it is very faint compared to Ret in the blue profile. North-South profiles (not shown) do not resolved either Ret, PS-E, or Ret+PS-E in any band, i.e. they are point-like along that direction with no hint of any faint extended emission.
Table 3 gives PACS fluxes estimated using the flux peaks of the point-like sources and integrating over beam sizes given by (FWHMx FWHMy) /4 . The PACS source identified with Ret is a blue object, while PS-E is a red one. The flux at 160 m corresponds to Ret+PS-E, but PS-E is the main contributor to the flux at this wavelength - the emission is peaking more towards PS-E (Fig. 1). The total flux of the Ret complex is 44.5 mJy, 40.4 mJy, and 42.6 mJy in the blue, green and red bands, respectively. The estimated 70 m flux for the whole complex agrees very well with the unresolved Spitzer flux of 46 mJy at the same wavelength (Trilling et al. 2008).
Table 3: Coordinates,fluxes, and 1 statistical errors of the Ret PACS point-like sources. Flux units are mJy.
4 Discussion
Figure 2: SED of Ret. Optical, 2MASS, IRAS, and Spitzer fluxes are indicated by black symbols. Blue triangles are Ret; red crosses are PS-E; green triangle is Ret+PS-E; magenta squares are total fluxes from the Ret complex. Error bars are smaller than the size of the symbols. The solid line is the best photospheric fit ( K, , and [Fe/H] = -0.23, which are mean values found using the DUNES discovery tool, http://sdc.laeff.inta.es/dunes). The dashed line is a 40 K black body normalized at the PS-E 100 m flux. The deduced 160 m flux from PS-E is also plotted with a red cross (see text). |
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Our data do not reveal any cold dust disk around Pav, HR 8501 or 51 Peg, since the observed and predicted 100 m photospheric fluxes coincide within the uncertainties (Table 2). Assuming dust temperatures of 40 K (peak blackbody fluxes at m), we can exclude debris disks with (1) (Eq. (4) from Beichmann et al. 2006).
Ret, located at 12 pc, is a G1 V star with a bolometric luminosity of 0.97 and an estimated age of 2-3 Gyr (Eiroa et al., in prep.). Figure 2 shows the stellar SED as well as PACS fluxes from PS-E and the whole complex; a PHOENIX stellar photosphere (Brott & Hauschildt 2005) is also plotted. The agreement between the observed 70 and 100 m fluxes from the blue bright point-source and those predicted by the photospheric fit, 24.7 mJy and 12.1 mJy at 70 and 100 m, respectively, is excellent. This photometry and its positional alignment with the stellar position support our claim that the PACS blue point-like object is indeed Ret. On the other hand, the nature of the extended structure is intriguing. While coincidental alignments with background objects are common in IRAS all-sky images, the much higher resolution of Herschel makes such juxtapositions unlikely within a targeted survey. Based on Spitzer source counts of background galaxies at 70 m (Dole et al. 2004), we find that the probability of chance alignment with a 20 mJy source within 10 is just 10-3.
The source PS-E is a red object with a black body temperature T(70-100 m) 40 K. We have pointed out that both PS-E and Ret are not resolved at 160 m and that the flux peak at this wavelength is closer to PS-E. If we subtract from the measured 160 m flux the stellar flux predicted for Ret (4.7 mJy) and make the plausible assumption that the residual flux (14.7 mJy) originates in PS-E, this 160 m flux for PS-E is again consistent with a 40 K blackbody (see Fig. 2). PS-E is clearly not stellar; we suggest that it is instead orbiting circumstellar dust. The contribution of the extended emission to the total flux can be estimated subtracting the point-like sources from the total flux reported above. The residual flux mainly corresponds to the Western diffuse emission since the point-like sources are not resolved along the North-South direction. In this case, the remaining flux corresponds to black body temperatures in the range 30-40 K, and the total fractional luminosity from the entire structure surrounding is .
We have the interesting scenario of a G1 V star surrounded by optically-thin 30-40 K emission. This is the temperature range expected for black body dust grains orbiting at distances 100 AU from the star. This is consistent with the projected linear distances from Ret to PS-E and to the Western diffuse emission of 70 AU and 120 AU, respectively. The red image suggests a flattened, disk-like structure with the star located asymmetrically along the major axis, while the blue and green images suggest it is ring-like given the flux cavity towards the West from the star. We interpret the structure in the PACS images as a dust ring surrounding Ret. We attribute the observed East-West asymmetry to a significant disk eccentricity - . Similarly, an offset is observed in the Fomalhaut debris disk with (Stapelfeldt et al. 2004). Maintaining a stable eccentric ring requires an external driving force such as a shepharding planet (Wyatt et al. 1999) and in the case of Fomalhaut the predicted planet has been been directly imaged (Kalas et al. 2008). The disk asymmetry in the Ret system may likewise be the signature of an unseen planetary companion. While this is an exciting possibility, other forces might also produce disk asymmetry. For example, interaction with the ISM is probably responsible for the strong asymmetry observed around HD 61005, since its brightness offset is well aligned with the star's space motion (Hines et al. 2007). A more profound analysis and detailed modeling of Ret and the suggested Kuiper belt is deferred to a future paper.
5 Conclusions
Our results show the capability of Herschel/PACS to detect and resolve cold dust disks with a luminosity close to the solar Kuiper belt, which will allows us to deepen our understanding of planetary systems, in particular those associated with mature stars. Specifically, our data exclude the existence of cold debris disks with (1) around the solar-type stars Pav, HR 8501 and 51 Peg. On the other hand, the data show that Ret is a good example where cold disks around nearby stars, very much alike the solar Kuiper belt, can be resolved and studied in great detail with the Herschel space observatory.
References
- Aumann, H. H., Beichman, C. A., Gillett, F. C., et al. 1984, ApJ, 278, L23
- Backman, D. E., & Paresce, F. 1993, in Protostars and Planets III, ed. E. H. Levy, & J. I. Lunine (Tucson: Univ. Arizona Press), 1253
- Beichman, C. A., Bryden, G., Stapelfeldt, K. R., et al. 2006, ApJ, 652, 1674
- Brott, I., & Hauschildt, P. H. 2005, ESA SP-576, C. Turon, ed. K. S. O'Flaherty, & M. A. C. Perryman, 565
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Footnotes
- ... results
- Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.
- ... DUNES
- DUst around NEarby Stars, http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/DUNES/
All Tables
Table 1: Summary of the SDP DUNES observations.
Table 2: Equatorial coordinates, FWHM at 100 m, observed fluxes with 1 statistical errors ( ), and predicted photospheric fluxes ().
Table 3: Coordinates,fluxes, and 1 statistical errors of the Ret PACS point-like sources. Flux units are mJy.
All Figures
Figure 1: PACS results of Ret. Panels from left to right: 70 m, 100 m, and 160 m. Upper panel: field size is with East to the left and North up. Middle panels plot isocontours. Note that the field size is different from that displayed in the upper panels. The ``star'' symbol, position (0,0), corresponds to the optical star (Table 3). A segment indicating 120 AU is shown. Contours: 70 m: 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15, 24 , 100 m: 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 14 , 160 m: 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18 (1 values are indicated in the text). Lower panels: RA intensity profiles through the peak flux of Ret (solid line). For comparison, RA intensity profiles of the calibration star Bootis are also plotted (dashed lines), scaled to the peak flux of Ret (70 and 100 m) and Ret+PS-E (160 m). The Bootis profile is also scaled and superimposed to PS-E in the 100 m panel. |
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In the text |
Figure 2: SED of Ret. Optical, 2MASS, IRAS, and Spitzer fluxes are indicated by black symbols. Blue triangles are Ret; red crosses are PS-E; green triangle is Ret+PS-E; magenta squares are total fluxes from the Ret complex. Error bars are smaller than the size of the symbols. The solid line is the best photospheric fit ( K, , and [Fe/H] = -0.23, which are mean values found using the DUNES discovery tool, http://sdc.laeff.inta.es/dunes). The dashed line is a 40 K black body normalized at the PS-E 100 m flux. The deduced 160 m flux from PS-E is also plotted with a red cross (see text). |
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In the text |
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