1 / 10

CorMASS+Magellan

CorMASS+Magellan. Science objective: IR spectroscopy of Spitzer sources Least massive brown dwarfs Proto-brown dwarfs Brown dwarf companions Serendipitous discoveries Properties of CorMASS Plans for Magellan. The least massive brown dwarfs. Spitzer+HST+Magellan. current. mid-90’s. ?.

hume
Télécharger la présentation

CorMASS+Magellan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CorMASS+Magellan • Science objective: IR spectroscopy of Spitzer sources • Least massive brown dwarfs • Proto-brown dwarfs • Brown dwarf companions • Serendipitous discoveries • Properties of CorMASS • Plans for Magellan

  2. The least massive brown dwarfs Spitzer+HST+Magellan current mid-90’s ? brown dwarfs stars Jupiter Sun

  3. Spitzer+IRAC (3-8 m): Chamaeleon I

  4. Spitzer+IRAC (3-8 m): Chamaeleon I CTIO 4 m (YJHK) HST+ACS (IZ)

  5. IR Spectroscopy of BD Candidates

  6. CorMASS+Magellan • CorMASS • Instrument team = John Wilson, Mike Skrutskie (UVa) • Capabilities = 0.8-2.5 m, cross-dispersed, R=300, f/9 • Previous telescopes = Palomar 60”, VATT, APO 3.5 m • On Magellan = 0.4x3” slit, SN=10 for K=18 in 1 hour • Ideal for followup of candidate brown dwarfs

  7. CorMASS+Magellan • CorMASS • Instrument team = John Wilson, Mike Skrutskie (UVa) • Capabilities = 0.8-2.5 m, cross-dispersed, R=300, f/9 • Previous telescopes = Palomar 60”, VATT, APO 3.5 m • On Magellan = 0.4x3” slit, SN=10 for K=18 in 1 hour • Ideal for followup of candidate brown dwarfs • Observing run on Magellan • ~8 nights in February or March 2005 • Queue observing for IRAC targets and other CfA proposed work • Harvard-only run now, but will advertise to partners up approval

More Related