Bibcode
Labadie, L.; Rebolo, R.; Villó, I.; Pérez-Prieto, J. A.; Pérez-Garrido, A.; Hildebrandt, S. R.; Femenía, B.; Díaz-Sanchez, A.; Béjar, V. J. S.; Oscoz, A.; López, R.; Piqueras, J.; Rodríguez, L. F.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 526, id.A144
Fecha de publicación:
2
2011
Revista
Número de citas
19
Número de citas referidas
15
Descripción
Context. High-contrast imaging at optical wavelengths is limited by the
modest correction of conventional near-IR optimized AO systems. We take
advantage of new fast and low-readout-noise detectors to explore the
potential of fast imaging coupled to post-processing techniques to
detect faint companions of stars at small angular separations.
Aims: We have focused on I-band direct imaging of the previously
detected brown dwarf binary HD 130948 BC, attempting to spatially
resolve the L2+L2 system considered as a benchmark for the determination
of substellar objects dynamical masses. Methods: We used the
lucky-imaging instrument FastCam at the 2.5-m Nordic Telescope to obtain
quasi diffraction-limited images of HD 130948 with ~0.1" resolution. In
order to improve the detectability of the faint binary in the vicinity
of a bright (I = 5.19 ± 0.03) solar-type star, we implemented a
post-processing technique based on wavelet transform filtering of the
image, which allows us to strongly enhance the presence of point-like
sources in regions where the primary halo generally dominates.
Results: We detect for the first time the binary brown dwarf HD 130948
BC in the optical band I with a SNR ~ 9 at 2.561" ± 0.007" (46.5
AU) from HD 130948 A and confirm in two independent datasets (2008 May
29 and July 25) that the object is real, as opposed to time-varying
residual speckles. We do not resolve the binary, which can be explained
by astrometric results posterior to our observations, which predict a
separation below the telescope resolution. We reach a contrast of
ΔI = 11.30 ± 0.11 at this distance, and estimate a combined
magnitude for this binary I = 16.49 ± 0.11 and a I - J color of
3.29 ± 0.13. At 1", we reach a detectability 10.5 mag fainter
than the primary after image post-processing. Conclusions: We
obtain on-sky validation of a technique based on speckle imaging and
wavelet-transform post-processing, which improves the high-contrast
capabilities of speckle imaging. The I - J color measured for the BD
companion is slightly bluer, but still consistent with what is typically
found for L2 dwarfs (~3.4-3.6).
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Rafael
Rebolo López