TWHydraBand7 For CASA 3.3: Difference between revisions
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==How to Use a casaguide== | ==How to Use a casaguide== | ||
For tips on | For tips on using CASA and ways CASA can be run, see [[EVLA_Spectral_Line_Calibration_IRC%2B10216#How_to_Use_This_casaguide]] page. | ||
In the guides | |||
<source lang="python"> | |||
# In CASA | |||
Regions of this color are CASA commands (or definitions) that need to be cut and pasted in sequence. | |||
</source> | |||
<pre style="background-color: #fffacd;"> | |||
Information this color shows excerpts from the CASA Logger output | |||
</pre> | |||
<pre style="background-color: #E0FFFF;"> | |||
Tells you background information about the data. | |||
</pre> |
Revision as of 14:01, 25 May 2011
Science Target Overview
TW Hya is a pre-main sequence classical T Tauri star at a distance of about 52+/-1 pc (Mamajek 2005,2010). TW Hya is the most studied member of the TW Hydra association (TWA) of low mass stars. From a wide variety of previous observations from the infrared to submillimeter, TW Hya is known to have a small optically thin hot inner disk to radii < 4 AU, and a larger cold dust disk out to about 200 AU (see for example introduction by Vacca & Sandell 2011, and references therein). Recent optical interferometry finds that TW Hya also contains a hot optically thick disk on even smaller sizescales of ~0.5 AU, and suggests that the optically thin disk could be due to gas clearing by a planet (Akeson et al. 2011). TW Hya is still accreting from its disk at a rate of about (4-20) x 10^-10 Msun/year and most recently its spectral type, mass, and age have been estimated at M2.5V, 0.4 Msun, and 3 Myr (Vacca & Sandell 2011).
Millimeter and submillimeter observations of the continuum and spectral lines are particularly useful for tracing in the outer cold disk. Previous observations by the VLA at 7 mm (Wilner et al. 2000), ATCA at 3 mm (Wilner et al. 2003), and the SMA at 1.3, 0.87, and 0.45 mm (Qi et al. 2004, 2006, 2008 and Hughes et al. 2011) reveal Keplerian rotation in the disk and an inclination of about 7 degrees (i.e. almost face-on). Detailed studies of the dust continuum properties from this work suggests that there are centimeter sized particles within the cold protoplanetary disk.
ALMA Data Overview
ALMA Science Verification data at Band 7 (~345 GHz) was taken for TW Hya on April 22, 2011. A scheduling block of about 1.5 hours long was run three times in a row for a total of about 4.5 hours of observing time. All four available basebands were used, resulting in four spectral windows (spws) containing data. Two basebands were placed in the Lower Sideband (LSB) and two basebands in the Upper Sideband (USB). In the LSB the CO(3-2) line at a rest frequency of 345.79599 GHz is located in spw=2. In the USB the HCO+(4-3) line at a rest frequency of 356.7342 GHz is located in spw=0. The other two spectral windows do not contain detectable spectral lines and are used for continuum. Each spectral window is 0.5 GHz wide and the channel width is 122 kHz. Because the ALMA correlator was configured to apply Hanning smoothing of the signal in the time domain, the effective spectral resolution is about twice the channel width, which in this case is about 0.2 km/s.
The ALMA CO(3-2) data presented here is similar to the Submillimeter Array data presented in Hughes et al. 2011 (ApJ, 727, 85), though the SMA data have ~3 times smaller channel width at 50 kHz.
HCO+(4-3) data has not previously been published, but SMA HCO+(3-2) data (at 267.55762 GHz) is presented in Qi et al. 2008 (ApJ, 681, 1396). These SMA data have comparable angular resolution but a wider 203 kHz channel width.
Obtaining the Data
The data reduction has been split into calibration and imaging pages:
The data are located HERE. Inside there are three directories.
RawDataAndTablesForReduction
CalibratedData
ReferenceImages
If you just want to see the images you can just download ReferenceImages. If you want to do data reduction, you can either start from the beginning using the RawDataAndTablesForReduction directory or begin with imaging from CalibratedData directory.
How to Use a casaguide
For tips on using CASA and ways CASA can be run, see EVLA_Spectral_Line_Calibration_IRC+10216#How_to_Use_This_casaguide page.
In the guides
# In CASA
Regions of this color are CASA commands (or definitions) that need to be cut and pasted in sequence.
Information this color shows excerpts from the CASA Logger output
Tells you background information about the data.