pith. sign in

arxiv: 1403.7520 · v1 · pith:KF45G26Enew · submitted 2014-03-28 · 🌌 astro-ph.EP · astro-ph.IM

The Gemini Planet Imager: First Light

Bruce Macintosh (1 , 2) , James R. Graham (3) , Patrick Ingraham (2) , Quinn Konopacky (4) , Christian Marois (5) , Marshall Perrin (6) , Lisa Poyneer (1)
show 65 more authors
Brian Bauman (1) Travis Barman (7) Adam Burrows (8) Andrew Cardwell (9) Jeffrey Chilcote Robert J. De Rosa (11) Daren Dillon (12) Rene Doyon (13) Jennifer Dunn (5) Darren Erikson (5) Michael Fitzgerald (10) Donald Gavel (12) Stephen Goodsell (9) Markus Hartung (9) Pascale Hibon (9) Paul G. Kalas (3) James Larkin (10) Jerome Maire (4) Franck Marchis (14) Mark Marley (15) James McBride (3) Max Millar-Blanchaer (4) Katie Morzinski (7) Andew Norton (12) B. R. Oppenheimer (16) Dave Palmer (1) Jennifer Patience (11) Laurent Pueyo (6) Fredrik Rantakyro (9) Naru Sadakuni (9) Leslie Saddlemyer (5) Dmitry Savransky (17) Andrew Serio (9) Remi Soummer (6) Anand Sivaramakrishnan (6) Inseok Song (18) Sandrine Thomas (15) J. Kent Wallace (19) Sloane Wiktorowicz (12) Schuyler Wolff (20) ((1) Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (2) Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics Cosmology Stanford University (3) University of California Berkeley (4) University of Toronto (5) National Research Council of Canada (6) Space Telescope Science Institute (7) University of Arizona (8) Princeton University (9) Gemini Observatory (10) University of California Los Angeles (11) Arizona State University (12) University of California Santa Cruz (13) Universit\'e de Montr\'eal Observatoire du Mont-M\'agnatic (14) SETI Institute (15) NASA/Ames (16) American Museum of Natural History (17) Cornell University (18) University of Georgia (19) Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of Technology (20) Johns Hopkins University)
This is my paper
classification 🌌 astro-ph.EP astro-ph.IM
keywords planetbetaobservationspictorisarcsecondsfirstgeminiimager
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a dedicated facility for directly imaging and spectroscopically characterizing extrasolar planets. It combines a very high-order adaptive optics system, a diffraction-suppressing coronagraph, and an integral field spectrograph with low spectral resolution but high spatial resolution. Every aspect of GPI has been tuned for maximum sensitivity to faint planets near bright stars. During first light observations, we achieved an estimated H band Strehl ratio of 0.89 and a 5-sigma contrast of $10^6$ at 0.75 arcseconds and $10^5$ at 0.35 arcseconds. Observations of Beta Pictoris clearly detect the planet, Beta Pictoris b, in a single 60-second exposure with minimal post-processing. Beta Pictoris b is observed at a separation of $434 \pm 6$ milli-arcseconds and position angle $211.8 \pm 0.5$ deg. Fitting the Keplerian orbit of Beta Pic b using the new position together with previous astrometry gives a factor of three improvement in most parameters over previous solutions. The planet orbits at a semi-major axis of $9.0^{+0.8}_{-0.4}$ AU near the 3:2 resonance with the previously-known 6 AU asteroidal belt and is aligned with the inner warped disk. The observations give a 4% posterior probability of a transit of the planet in late 2017.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.