GeminiFocus October 2013 | Page 13

For astronomers interested in all subjects, these observations most importantly demonstrate the utility of the GeMS AO system even in the relatively poor seeing conditions under which these data were obtained. The delivered image quality here (Figure 2) provides full-width at half-maximum in the Ks band of < 0.16 arcsecond. This represents a significant improvement over the natural seeing, which, on the night these data were obtained, was roughly 0.8 arcsecond — a value worse than average at Gemini South on Cerro Pachón. The paper appears in The Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Davidge, T. J., et al., F. Haffner 16: A Young Moving Group in the Making. eprint arXiv:1308.5432. Limits on Quaoar’s Atmosphere The Kuiper Belt Object Quaoar (pronounced Kwa-whar), located well beyond the orbit of Pluto, can be studied through occultations as it passes along the line of sight through the crowed plane of the Milky Way. Occultations are an effective probe because astronomers know the speeds of Solar System bodies very precisely from their orbits, so the duration when starlight is blocked provides a direct measurement of the size of the occulting object. In addition, an occultation can uncover information about the nearby body’s atmosphere, if it exists. A rocky body without an atmosphere will immediately extinguish the starlight, while one with an atmosphere will create a “fuzzy” event with a slow dimming and eventual blocking of the starlight. Recent “near-misses” of Quaoar occultations provide some constraints on a possible atmosphere, as Wesley Fraser (National Research Council Herzberg, Canada) and collaborators rule out some pure N2 and CO models. They find that a methane atmosphere is possible, with temperature and October2013 pressure values that prevented detectability in the latest observations. The background stars are relatively faint, and rapid photometry is required, so the acquisition camera on Gemini, normally used to adjust the telescope pointing, became (unusually) the science instrument. Photometric measurements were recorded several times per second. One of the challenges of these observations is that the catalogued positions of many of the stars are not sufficiently precise to predict an occultation with certainty. The team uses observations from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) Legacy Survey to make the predictions of upcoming occultations, and then they only observe events that have the highest probability of being successful. Despite these efforts, to date no occultation event of the large