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Showing papers by "Seppo Laine published in 2019"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a binary black hole model of OJ 287 was proposed, where the secondary black hole orbits a much more massive primary, and impacts on the primary accretion disk at predictable times.
Abstract: In the binary black hole model of OJ 287, the secondary black hole orbits a much more massive primary, and impacts on the primary accretion disk at predictable times. We update the parameters of the disk, the viscosity, α, and the mass accretion rate, m. We find α = 0.26±0.1 and m=0.08±0.04 in Eddington units. The former value is consistent with Coroniti, and the latter with Marscher & Jorstad. Predictions are made for the 2019 July 30 superflare in OJ 287. We expect that it will take place simultaneously at the Spitzer infrared channels, as well as in the optical, and that therefore the timing of the flare in optical can be accurately determined from Spitzer observations. We also discuss in detail the light curve of the 2015 flare, and find that the radiating volume has regions where bremsstrahlung dominates, as well as regions that radiate primarily in synchrotron radiation. The former region produces the unpolarized first flare, while the latter region gives rise to a highly polarized second flare.

30 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors make predictions for the 2019 July 30 super-flare in OJ 287, which will take place simultaneously at the Spitzer infrared channels as well as in the optical and that therefore the timing of the flare in optical can be accurately determined from Spitzer observations.
Abstract: In the binary black hole model of OJ 287 the secondary black hole orbits a much more massive primary, and impacts on the primary accretion disk at predictable times. We update the parameters of the disk, the viscosity $\alpha$ and the mass accretion rate $\dot m$. We find $\alpha=0.26 \pm 0.1$ and $\dot m = 0.08 \pm 0.04$ in Eddington units. The former value is consistent with Coroniti (1981) and the latter with Marscher and Jorstad (2011). Predictions are made for the 2019 July 30 superflare in OJ 287. We expect that it will take place simultaneously at the Spitzer infrared channels as well as in the optical and that therefore the timing of the flare in optical can be accurately determined from Spitzer observations. We also discuss in detail the light curve of the 2015 flare and find that the radiating volume has regions where bremsstrahlung dominates as well as regions that radiate primarily in synchrotron radiation. The former region produces the unpolarised first flare while the latter region gives rise to a highly polarized second flare.

10 citations


Posted Content
Vanessa P. Bailey, Lee Armus, Bala Balasubramanian, Pierre Baudoz, Andrea Bellini, Dominic J. Benford, Bruce Berriman, Aparna Bhattacharya, Anthony Boccaletti, Eric Cady, Sebastiano Calchi Novati, Kenneth G. Carpenter, David R. Ciardi, B. P. Crill, William C. Danchi, John H. Debes, Richard T. Demers, Kjetil Dohlen, Robert Effinger, Marc Ferrari, Margaret A. Frerking, Dawn M. Gelino, Julien Girard, Kevin Grady, Tyler D. Groff, Leon K. Harding, George Helou, Avenhaus Henning, Markus Janson, Jason S. Kalirai, Stephen R. Kane, N. Jeremy Kasdin, Matthew A. Kenworthy, Brian Kern, John Krist, Jeffrey W. Kruk, Anne-Marie Lagrange, Seppo Laine, Maud Langlois, Herve Le Coroller, Chris Lindensmith, Patrick Lowrance, Anne-Lise Maire, Sangeeta Malhotra, Avi Mandell, Michael W. McElwain, Camilo Mejia Prada, Bertrand Mennesson, Tiffany Meshkat, Dwight Moody, Patrick Morrissey, Leonidas A. Moustakas, Mamadou N'Diaye1, Bijan Nemati, Charley Noecker, Roberta Paladini, Marshall D. Perrin, Ilya Poberezhskiy, Marc Postman, Laurent Pueyo, S. Ramirez, Clément Ranc, Jason Rhodes, A. J. Riggs, Maxime Rizzo, Aki Roberge, D. Rouan, Joshua E. Schlieder, Byoung-Joon Seo, Stuart Shaklan, Fang Shi, Rémi Soummer, David N. Spergel, Karl R. Stapelfeldt, Christopher C. Stark, Motohide Tamura, Hong Tang, John T. Trauger, Margaret Turnbull, Roeland P. van der Marel, Arthur Vigan, Benjamin F. Williams, Edward J. Wollack, Marie Ygouf, Feng Zhao, Hanying Zhoud, Neil Zimmerman 
TL;DR: The Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) Coronagraph Instrument (CGI) is a high-contrast imager and integral field spectrograph that will enable the study of exoplanets and circumstellar disks at visible wavelengths as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) Coronagraph Instrument (CGI) is a high-contrast imager and integral field spectrograph that will enable the study of exoplanets and circumstellar disks at visible wavelengths. Ground-based high-contrast instrumentation has fundamentally limited performance at small working angles, even under optimistic assumptions for 30m-class telescopes. There is a strong scientific driver for better performance, particularly at visible wavelengths. Future flagship mission concepts aim to image Earth analogues with visible light flux ratios of more than 10^10. CGI is a critical intermediate step toward that goal, with a predicted 10^8-9 flux ratio capability in the visible. CGI achieves this through improvements over current ground and space systems in several areas: (i) Hardware: space-qualified (TRL9) deformable mirrors, detectors, and coronagraphs, (ii) Algorithms: wavefront sensing and control; post-processing of integral field spectrograph, polarimetric, and extended object data, and (iii) Validation of telescope and instrument models at high accuracy and precision. This white paper, submitted to the 2018 NAS Exoplanet Science Strategy call, describes the status of key CGI technologies and presents ways in which performance is likely to evolve as the CGI design matures.

5 citations


Posted Content
TL;DR: The Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) Coronagraph Instrument (CGI) as discussed by the authors is the first high-performance stellar coronagraph using active wavefront control for deep starlight suppression in space, providing unprecedented levels of contrast, spatial resolution and sensitivity for astronomical observations in the optical.
Abstract: The Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) Coronagraph Instrument (CGI) will be the first high-performance stellar coronagraph using active wavefront control for deep starlight suppression in space, providing unprecedented levels of contrast, spatial resolution, and sensitivity for astronomical observations in the optical. One science case enabled by the CGI will be taking images and(R~50)spectra of faint interplanetary dust structures present in the habitable zone of nearby sunlike stars (~10 pc) and within the snow-line of more distant ones(~20pc), down to dust density levels commensurate with that of the solar system zodiacal cloud. Reaching contrast levels below~10-7 for the first time, CGI will cross an important threshold in debris disks physics, accessing disks with low enough optical depths that their structure is dominated by transport phenomena than collisions. Hence, CGI results will be crucial for determining how exozodiacal dust grains are produced and transported in low-density disks around mature stars. Additionally, CGI will be able to measure the brightness level and constrain the degree of asymmetry of exozodiacal clouds around individual nearby sunlike stars in the optical, at the ~10x solar zodiacal emission level. This information will be extremely valuable for optimizing the observational strategy of possible future exo-Earth direct imaging missions, especially those planning to operate at optical wavelengths, such as Habitable Exoplanet Observatory (HabEx) and the Large Ultraviolet/Optical/Infrared Surveyor (LUVOIR).

3 citations