71 research outputs found
Mapping the stellar populations of the Milky Way with Gaia
Gaia will be ESA's milestone astrometric mission, and is due for launch at
the end of 2013. Gaia will repeatedly map the whole sky measuring about one
billion sources to V=20-22 mag. Its data products will be {\mu}as accuracy
astrometry, optical spectrophotometry and medium resolution spectroscopy. A
description of the Gaia space mission and its characteristics and performance
is given. The expected impact on Galactic stellar population studies is
discussed, with particular attention to the sources of interest for CoRoT and
Kepler.Comment: Proc. of the workshop "Asteroseismology of stellar populations in the
Milky Way" (Sesto, 22-26 July 2013), Astrophysics and Space Science
Proceedings, (eds. A. Miglio, L. Girardi, P. Eggenberger, J. Montalban
The promise of Gaia and how it will influence stellar ages
The Gaia space project, planned for launch in 2011, is one of the ESA
cornerstone missions, and will provide astrometric, photometric and
spectroscopic data of very high quality for about one billion stars brighter
than V=20. This will allow to reach an unprecedented level of information and
knowledge on several of the most fundamental astrophysical issues, such as
mapping of the Milky Way, stellar physics (classification and
parameterization), Galactic kinematics and dynamics, study of the resolved
stellar populations in the Local Group, distance scale and age of the Universe,
dark matter distribution (potential tracers), reference frame (quasars,
astrometry), planet detection, fundamental physics, Solar physics, Solar system
science. I will present a description of the instrument and its main
characteristics, and discuss a few specific science cases where Gaia data
promise to contribute fundamental improvement within the scope of this
Symposium.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, IAU Symp. 258 on "The Ages of Stars
Globular Cluster Distances from RR Lyrae Stars
The most common methods to derive the distance to globular clusters using RR
Lyrae variables are reviewed, with a special attention to those that have
experienced significant improvement in the past few years. From the weighted
average of these most recent determinations the absolute magnitude of the RR
Lyrae stars at [Fe/H]=-1.5 is Mv = 0.59 +/- 0.03 mag, corresponding to a
distance modulus for the LMC (m-M)o = 18.48 +/- 0.05.Comment: 19 pages, 2 Postscript figures, Latex, uses svmult.cls. To be
published in ``Stellar Candles'', Lecture Notes in Physics
(http://link.springer.de/series/lnpp) Text update in Sect. 2.2, 2.4 and Table
VLT spectroscopy of globular clusters in the Sombrero galaxy
We have obtained intermediate-resolution VLT spectroscopy of 75 globular
cluster candidates around the Sa galaxy M104 (NGC4594). Fifty-seven candidates
out to ~ 40 kpc in the halo of the galaxy were confirmed to be bona-fide
globular clusters, 27 of which are new. A first analysis of the velocities
provides only marginal evidence for rotation of the cluster system. From Hbeta
line strengths, almost all of the clusters in our sample have ages that are
consistent, within the errors, with Milky Way globular clusters. Only a few
clusters may be 1-2 Gyr old, and bulge and halo clusters appear coeval. The
absorption line indices follow the correlations established for the Milky Way
clusters. Metallicities are derived based upon new empirical calibrations with
Galactic globular clusters taking into account the non-linear behavior of some
indices (e.g., Mg2). Our sample of globular clusters in NGC4594 spans a
metallicity range of -2.13 < [Fe/H] < +0.26 dex, and the median metallicity of
the system is [Fe/H] = -0.85. Thus, our data provide evidence that some of the
clusters have super-solar metallicity. Overall, the abundance distribution of
the cluster system is consistent with a bimodal distribution with peaks at
[Fe/H] ~- 1.7 and -0.7. However, the radial change in the metallicity
distribution of clusters may not be straightforwardly explained by a varying
mixture of two sub-populations of red and blue clusters.Comment: 6 pages (incl. 4 figures) to appear in the proceedings of the ESO
workshop "Extragalactic Globular Cluster Systems", ESO Astrophysics Symp.,
Garching bei Muenchen (Germany), ed. Kissler-Patig M., Springer-Verlag:
Heidelber
Star-to-star Na and O abundance variations along the red giant branch in NGC 2808
We report for the first time Na and O abundances from high-resolution, high
S/N echelle spectra of 20 red giants in NGC 2808, taken as part of the Science
Verification program of the FLAMES multi-object spectrograph at the ESO VLT. In
these stars, spanning about 3 mag from the red giant branch (RGB) tip, large
variations are detected in the abundances of oxygen and sodium, anticorrelated
with each other; this is a well known evidence of proton-capture reactions at
high temperatures in the ON and NeNa cycles. One star appears super O-poor; if
the extension of the Na-O anticorrelation is confirmed, NGC 2808 might reach O
depletion levels as large as those of M 13. This result confirms our previous
findings based on lower resolution spectra (Carretta et al. 2003) of a large
star-to-star scatter in proton capture elements at all positions along the RGB
in NGC 2808, with no significant evolutionary contribution. Finally, the
average metallicity for NGC 2808 is [Fe/H]= -1.14 +/- 0.01 dex (rms=0.06) from
19 stars.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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