495 research outputs found
An empirical temperature calibration for the Delta a photometric system. II. The A-type and mid F-type star
With the Delta a photometric system, it is possible to study very distant
galactic and even extragalactic clusters with a high level of accuracy. This
can be done with a classical color-magnitude diagram and appropriate
isochrones. The new calibration presented in this paper is a powerful
extension. For open clusters, the reddening is straightforward for an
estimation via Isochrone fitting and is needed in order to calculate the
reddening-free, temperature sensitive, index (g1-y)0. As a last step, the
calibration can be applied to individual stars. Because no a-priori
reddening-free photometric parameters are available for the investigated
spectral range, we have applied the dereddening calibrations of the Stromgren
uvbybeta system and compared them with extinction models for the Milky Way. As
expected from the sample of bright stars, the extinction is negligible for
almost all objects. As a next step, already established calibrations within the
Stromgren uvbybeta, Geneva 7-color, and Johnson UBV systems were applied to a
sample of 282 normal stars to derive a polynomial fit of the third degree for
the averaged effective temperatures to the individual (g1-y)0 values with a
mean of the error for the whole sample of Delta T(eff) is 134K, which is lower
than the value in Paper I for hotter stars. No statistically significant effect
of the rotational velocity on the precision of the calibration was found.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by A&
A new catalogue of Stroemgren-Crawford uvbybeta photometry
A new all-sky catalogue of all available uvbybeta measurements from the
literature was generated. The uvbybeta photometric system is widely used for
the study of various Galactic and extragalactic objects. It measures the colour
due to temperature differences, the Balmer discontinuity, and blanketing
absorption due to metals. The data for the individual stars were cross-checked
on the basis of the Tycho-2 catalogue. This catalogue includes very precise
celestial coordinates, but is magnitude and spatial resolution limited.
However, the loss of objects is only marginal and is compensated for by the
gain of homogeneity. In total, 298 639 measurements of 60 668 stars were used
to derive unweighted mean indices and their errors. Photoelectric and CCD
observations were treated in the same way. The presented data set can be used
for various applications such as new calibrations of astrophysical parameters,
the standardization of new observations, and as additional information for
ongoing and forthcoming all-sky surveys.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics: 3 pages, 3
figures, 1 tabl
Theoretical isochrones for the Delta a photometric system
We have calculated theoretical isochrones for the photometric Delta a system
to derive astrophysical parameters such as the age, reddening and distance
modulus for open clusters. The Delta a system samples the flux depression at
520 nm which is highly efficient to detect chemically peculiar (CP) objects of
the upper main sequence. The evolutionary status of CP stars is still a matter
of debate and very important to test, for example, the dynamo and diffusion
theories. In fact, the dynamo or fossil origin of the magnetic fields present
in this kind of stars it still not clear. Using the stellar evolutionary models
by Claret (1995), a grid of isochrones with different initial chemical
compositions for the Delta a system was generated. The published data of 23
open clusters were used to fit these isochrones with astrophysical parameters
(age, reddening and distance modulus) from the literature. As an additional
test, isochrones with the same parameters for Johnson UBV data of these open
clusters were also considered. The fits show a good agreement between the
observations and the theoretical grid. We find that the accuracy of fitting
isochrones to Delta a data without the knowledge of the cluster parameters is
between 5 and 15%.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
The Hvar survey for roAp stars: II. Final results (Research Note)
The 60 known rapidly oscillating Ap (roAp) stars are excellent laboratories
to test pulsation models in the presence of stellar magnetic fields. Our survey
is dedicated to search for new group members in the Northern Hemisphere. We
attempt to increase the number of known chemically peculiar stars that are
known to be pulsationally unstable. About 40 h of new CCD photometric data of
21 roAp candidates, observed at the 1m Austrian-Croatian Telescope (Hvar
Observatory) are presented. We carefully analysed these to search for
pulsations in the frequency range of up to 10mHz. No new roAp star was detected
among the observed targets. The distribution of the upper limits for roAp-like
variations is similar to that of previoius similar efforts using
photomultipliers and comparable telescope sizes. In addition to photometric
observations, we need to consolidate spectroscopic information to select
suitable targets.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Towards a photometric metallicity scale for open clusters
Open clusters are a useful tool when investigating several topics connected
with stellar evolution; for example the age or distance can be more accurately
determined than for field stars. However, one important parameter, the
metallicity, is only known for a marginal percentage of open clusters. We aim
at a consistent set of parameters for the open clusters investigated in our
photometric Delta-a survey of chemically peculiar stars. Special attention is
paid to expanding our knowledge of cluster metallicities and verifying their
scale. Making use of a previously developed method based on normalised
evolutionary grids and photometric data, the distance, age, reddening, and
metallicity of open clusters were derived. To transform photometric
measurements into effective temperatures to use as input for our method, a set
of temperature calibrations for the most commonly used colour indices and
photometric systems was compiled. We analysed 58 open clusters in total. Our
derived metallicity values were in excellent agreement with about 30
spectroscopically studied targets. The mean value of the absolute deviations
was found to be 0.03 dex, with no noticeable offset or gradient. The method was
also applied using recent evolutionary models based on the currently accepted
lower solar abundance value Z=0.014. No significant differences were found
compared to grids using the former adopted solar value Z=0.02. Furthermore,
some divergent photometric datasets were identified and discussed. The method
provides an accurate way of obtaining properly scaled metallicity values for
open clusters. In light of present and future homogeneous photometric sky
surveys, the sample of stellar clusters can be extended to the outskirts of the
Milky Way, where spectroscopic studies are almost impossible. This will help
for determining galactic metallicity gradients in more detail.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (19 pages including online material
A comparative study on the reliability of open cluster parameters
Context. Open clusters are known as excellent tracers of the structure and chemical evolution of the Galactic disk, however, the accuracy and reliability of open cluster parameters is poorly known.
Aims: In recent years, several studies aimed to present homogeneous open cluster parameter compilations, which are based on some different approaches and photometric data. These catalogues are excellent sources to facilitate testing of the actual accuracy of open cluster parameters.
Methods: We compare seven cluster parameter compilations statistically and with an external sample, which comprises the mean results of individual studies. Furthermore, we selected the objects IC 4651, NGC 2158, NGC 2383, NGC 2489, NGC 2627, NGC 6603, and Trumpler 14, with the main aim to highlight differences in the fitting solutions.
Results: We derived correction terms for each cluster parameter, using the external calibration sample. Most results by the compilations are reasonable scaled, but there are trends or constant offsets of different degree. We also identified one data set, which appears too erroneous to allow adjustments. After the correction, the mean intrinsic errors amount to about 0.2 dex for the age, 0.08 mag for the reddening, and 0.35 mag for the distance modulus. However, there is no study that characterises the cluster morphologies of all test cases in a correct and consistent manner. Furthermore, we found that the largest compilations probably include at least 20 percent of problematic objects, for which the parameters differ significantly. These could be among others doubtful or unlikely open clusters that do not facilitate an unambiguous fitting solution
Chemically peculiar stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud
The detection of magnetic chemically peculiar (CP2) stars in open clusters of
extragalactic systems can give observational answers to many unsolved
questions. The mean percentage of CP2 stars in the Milky Way is of the order of
5% for the spectral range from early B- to F-type, luminosity class V objects.
The origin of the CP2 phenomenon seems to be closely connected to the overall
metallicity and global magnetic field environment. The theoretical models are
still only tested by observations in the Milky Way. It is therefore essential
to provide high quality observations in rather different global environments.
The young clusters NGC 2136/7 were observed in the Delta a photometric system.
This intermediate band photometric system samples the depth of the 520nm flux
depression by comparing the flux at the center with the adjacent regions with
bandwidths of 11nm to 23nm. The Delta a photometric system is most suitable for
detecting CP2 stars with high efficiency, but is also capable of detecting a
small percentage of non-magnetic CP objects. We present high precision
photometric Delta a observations of 417 objects in NGC 2136/7 and its
surrounding field, of which five turned out to be bona fide magnetic CP stars.
In addition, we discovered two Be/Ae stars. From our investigations of NGC
1711, NGC 1866, NGC 2136/7, their surroundings, and one independent field of
the LMC population, we derive an occurrence of classical chemically peculiar
stars of 2.2(6)% in the LMC, which is only half the value found in the Milky
Way. The mass and age distribution of the photometrically detected CP stars is
not different from that of similar objects in galactic open clusters.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
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