Barry Smalley
Keele University
448 Papers
6.6K Citations
Barry Smalley is an academic researcher from Keele University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Planet & Stars. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 443 publications. Previous affiliations of Barry Smalley include University College London & Max Planck Society.
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Papers
The distance to the Pleiades from the eclipsing binary HD 23642
John Southworth,Pierre F. L. Maxted,Barry Smalley +2 more
- 01 Jun 2004
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reanalyse the data of Munari et al. to explore the dierent methods of estimating the distance of an eclipsing binary system and find a distance of 139±4pc, which is consistent with the 'long' Pleiades distance and in disagreement with the Hipparcos parallax distances to the open cluster.
Three Saturn-mass planets transiting F-type stars revealed with TESS and HARPS. TOI-615b, TOI-622b, and TOI-2641b
Angelica Psaridi,Francois Bouchy,Monika Lendl,B. Akinsanmi,Keivan G. Stassun,Barry Smalley,David J. Armstrong,Saburo Howard,Solène Chloé Ulmer-Moll,Nolan Grieves,Khalid Barkaoui,Edward M. Bryant,Olga Su'arez,Tristan Guillot,Phil Evans,O. Attia,Robert A. Wittenmyer,Samuel Yee,Karen A. Collins,George Zhou,F. Galland,Le Parc,Stéphane Udry,Pedro Figueira,Carl Ziegler,Christoph Mordasini,Joshua N. Winn,Sara Seager,Jon M. Jenkins,Joseph D. Twicken,Lyu Abe,Brett C. Addison,Cesar Briceno,Joshua T. Briegal,Kevin Collins,Tansu Daylan,Phillip Eigmuller,Gabor Furesz,Natalia Guerrero,Janis Hagelberg,Alexis Heitzmann,Rebekah Hounsell,Chelsea X. Huang,Andreas Krenn,Nicholas M. Law,Andrew W. Mann,James McCormac,Djamel M'ekarnia,D. Mounzer,Louise D. Nielsen,A. Osborn,Ramotholo Sefako,Michal Steiner,P. A. Strøm,Amaury H. M. J. Triaud,Jose I. Vines,Christopher A. Watson,Duncan J. Wright +57 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors reported the discovery of TOI-615b, TOI622b, and TOI2641b, three Saturn-mass planets transiting main sequence, F-type stars.
Ground-Based Transmission Spectroscopy with VLT FORS2: Evidence for faculae and clouds in the optical spectrum of the warm Saturn WASP-110b.
Nikolay Nikolov,Gracjan Maciejewski,Savvas Constantinou,Nikku Madhusudhan,Jonathan J. Fortney,Barry Smalley,Aarynn L. Carter,Ernst J. W. de Mooij,Benjamin Drummond,Neale P. Gibson,Christiane Helling,Nathan J. Mayne,Thomas Mikal-Evans,David K. Sing,Jamie Wilson +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a ground-based optical transmission spectrum for the warm Saturn-mass exoplanet WASP-110b from two transit observations made with the FOcal Reducer and Spectrograph (FORS2) on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) was presented.
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Accurate fundamental parameters for 23 bright solar-type stars
Hans Bruntt,Timothy R. Bedding,P.-O. Quirion,P.-O. Quirion,G. Lo Curto,Fabien Carrier,Barry Smalley,T. H. Dall,T. Arentoft,Michael Bazot,R. P. Butler +10 more
Abstract: We combine results from interferometry, asteroseismology and spectroscopy to determine accurate fundamental parameters of 23 bright solar-type stars, from spectral type F5 to K2 and luminosity classes III to V. For some stars we can use direct techniques to determine the mass, radius, luminosity and effective temperature, and we compare with indirect methods that rely on photometric calibrations or spectroscopic analyses. We use the asteroseismic information available in the literature to infer an indirect mass with an accuracy of 4-15 percent. From indirect methods we determine luminosity and radius to 3 percent. For Teff we find a slight offset of -40+-20 K between the spectroscopic method and the direct method, meaning the spectroscopic temperatures are too high.
From the spectroscopic analysis we determine the detailed chemical composition for 13 elements, including Li, C and O. We find no significant offset between the spectroscopic surface gravity and the value from combining asteroseismology with radius estimates. From the spectroscopy we also determine vsini and we present a new calibration of macro- and microturbulence. From the comparison between the results from the direct and spectroscopic methods we claim that we can determine Teff, log g, and [Fe/H] with absolute accuracies of 80 K, 0.08 dex, and 0.07 dex. The indirect methods are important to obtain reliable estimates of the fundamental parameters of relatively faint stars when interferometry cannot be used. Our study is the first to compare direct and indirect methods for a large sample of stars, and we conclude that indirect methods are valid, although slight corrections may be needed.
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Sakurai's Object: the web page Open Discussion
TL;DR: The contributors bounced some ideas around and shared their thoughts about maximizing the advancement that a study of Sakurai's Object can provide, and it was resolved to set up a web site http://astro.uibk.ac.uk/sakurai.
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