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John D. Monnier Stefan Kraus Michael J. Ireland Fabien Baron Amelia Bayo Jean-Philippe Berger Michelle Creech-Eakman Ruobing Dong Gaspard Duchêne Catherine Espaillat Chris Haniff Sebastian Hönig Andrea Isella Attila Juhasz Lucas Labadie Sylvestre Lacour Stephanie Leifer Antoine Merand Ernest Michael Stefano Minardi Christoph Mordasini David Mozurkewich Johan Olofsson Claudia Paladini Romain Petrov Jörg-Uwe Pott Stephen Ridgway Stephen Rinehart Keivan Stassun Jean Surdej Theo ten Brummelaar Neal Turner Peter Tuthill Kerry Vahala Gerard van Belle Gautam Vasisht Ed Wishnow John Young Zhaohuan Zhu 《Experimental Astronomy》2018,46(3):517-529
The Planet Formation Imager (PFI, www.planetformationimager.org) is a next-generation infrared interferometer array with the primary goal of imaging the active phases of planet formation in nearby star forming regions. PFI will be sensitive to warm dust emission using mid-infrared capabilities made possible by precise fringe tracking in the near-infrared. An L/M band combiner will be especially sensitive to thermal emission from young exoplanets (and their disks) with a high spectral resolution mode to probe the kinematics of CO and H2O gas. In this paper, we give an overview of the main science goals of PFI, define a baseline PFI architecture that can achieve those goals, point at remaining technical challenges, and suggest activities today that will help make the Planet Formation Imager facility a reality. 相似文献
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Although coral reefs worldwide are subject to increasing global threats, humans also impact coral reefs directly through localized activities such as snorkeling, kayaking and fishing. We investigated five sites on the northern shore of Moorea, French Polynesia, and quantified the number of visitors on the beach and in shallow water. In field surveys, we measured total coral cover and colony sizes of two common genera, Porites and Acropora, a massive and branching morphology, respectively. One site, which hosted over an order of magnitude more people than the other four, had significantly less total coral cover and supported very little branching Acropora. In addition, size frequency distributions of both the branching and massive genera were skewed toward smaller colony sizes at the high use site. Our results demonstrated that the use of tropical beaches may result in less coral cover, with branching colonies rare and small. 相似文献
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