4.7 Article

Follow-up Imaging of Disk Candidates from the Disk Detective Citizen Science Project: New Discoveries and False Positives in WISE Circumstellar Disk Surveys

期刊

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
卷 868, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aae3e3

关键词

catalogs; infrared: planetary systems; methods: data analysis; protoplanetary disks; surveys

资金

  1. NASA Astrophysics Data Analysis Program [14-ADAP14-0161]
  2. NASA Exoplanets Research Program [16-XRP16_ 2-0127]
  3. NASA Astrobiology Program via the Goddard Center for Astrobiology
  4. NASA
  5. NSF
  6. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  7. National Science Foundation
  8. U.S. Department of Energy
  9. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  10. Japanese Monbukagakusho
  11. Max Planck Society
  12. Higher Education Funding Council for England
  13. NASA [NAS5-26555]
  14. NASA Office of Space Science [NNX13AC07G]
  15. National Science Foundation [AST-0906060, AST-0960343, AST-1207891]
  16. Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation
  17. Chandra X-ray Science Center (CXC)
  18. High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Center (HEASARC)
  19. JWST Mission office at the Space Telescope Science Institute for 3D visualization
  20. NASA High-End Computing (HEC) Program through the NASA Center for Climate Simulation (NCCS) at Goddard Space Flight Center

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Disk Detective citizen science project aims to find new stars with excess 22 mu m emission from circumstellar dust in the AllWISE data release from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer. We evaluated 261 Disk Detective objects of interest with imaging with the Robo-AO adaptive optics instrument on the 1.5 m telescope at Palomar Observatory and with RetroCam on the 2.5 m du Pont Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory to search for background objects at 0.'' 15-12 '' separations from each target. Our analysis of these data leads us to reject 7% of targets. Combining this result with statistics from our online image classification efforts implies that at most 7.9% +/- 0.2% of AllWISE-selected infrared excesses are good disk candidates. Applying our false-positive rates to other surveys, we find that the infrared excess searches of McDonald et al. and Marton et al. all have false-positive rates > 70%. Moreover, we find that all 13 disk candidates in Theissen & West with W4 signal-to-noise ratio > 3 are false positives. We present 244 disk candidates that have survived vetting by follow-up imaging. Of these, 213 are newly identified disk systems. Twelve of these are candidate members of comoving pairs based on Gaia astrometry, supporting the hypothesis that warm dust is associated with binary systems. We also note the discovery of 22 mu m excess around two known members of the Scorpius-Centaurus association, and we identify known disk host WISEA J164540.79-310226.6 as a likely Sco-Cen member. Thirty of these disk candidates are closer than similar to 125 pc (including 26 debris disks), making them good targets for both direct-imaging exoplanet searches.

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