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We compare the observational and theoretical spectra of the $Delta v$ = 2 CO bands in a range of M dwarfs. We investigate the dependence of theoretical spectra on effective temperatures as well as carbon abundance. In general we find that the synthetic CO bands fit the observed data extremely well and are excellent diagnostics. In particular the synthetic spectra reasonably match observations and the best fit temperatures are similar to those found by empirical methods. We also examine the CDC isotopic ratio. We find that fundamental $^{13}$CO bands around 2.345 and 2.375 $mu$m are good discriminators for the CDC ratio in M dwarfs. The 2.375 $mu$m is more useful because it doesnt suffer such serious contamination by water vapour transitions. Our current dataset does not quite have the wavelength coverage to perform a reliable determination of the CDC ratio in M dwarfs. For this we recommend observing the region 2.31--2.40 $mu$m at a resolution of better than 1000. Alternatively the observational problems of contamination by water vapour at 2.345 $mu$m maybe solved by observing at resolutions of around 50000. We also investigated the possibility of using the $Delta v$ = 1 CO bands around 4.5 $mu$m. We find that the contamination due to water vapour is even more of a problem at these wavelengths.
M band spectra of two late-type T dwarfs, 2MASS J09373487+2931409, and Gliese 570D, confirm evidence from photometry that photospheric CO is present at abundance levels far in excess of those predicted from chemical equilibrium. These new and unambig
In an echelle spectrum of X Per acquired with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph we have identified individual rotational lines of 11 triplet-singlet (intersystem) absorption bands of ^12CO. Four bands provide first detections for interstellar
The goal is to determine the composition of Plutos atmosphere and to constrain the nature of surface-atmosphere interactions. We perform high--resolution spectroscopic observations in the 2.33--2.36 $mu$m range, using CRIRES at the VLT. We obtain
We compare high resolution infrared observations of the CO 3-1 bands in the 2.297-2.310 micron region of M dwarfs and one L dwarf with theoretical expectations. We find a good match between the observational and synthetic spectra throughout the 2000-
Laser pulses with stable electric field waveforms establish the opportunity to achieve coherent control on attosecond timescales. We present experimental and theoretical results on the steering of electronic motion in a multi-electron system. A very