1,622 research outputs found
Chemodynamical history of the Galactic Bulge
The Galactic Bulge can uniquely be studied from large samples of individual
stars, and is therefore of prime importance for understanding the stellar
population structure of bulges in general. Here the observational evidence on
the kinematics, chemical composition, and ages of Bulge stellar populations
based on photometric and spectroscopic data is reviewed. The bulk of Bulge
stars are old and span a metallicity range -1.5<~[Fe/H]<~+0.5. Stellar
populations and chemical properties suggest a star formation timescale below ~2
Gyr. The overall Bulge is barred and follows cylindrical rotation, and the more
metal-rich stars trace a Box/Peanut (B/P) structure. Dynamical models
demonstrate the different spatial and orbital distributions of metal-rich and
metal-poor stars. We discuss current Bulge formation scenarios based on
dynamical, chemical, chemodynamical and cosmological models. Despite impressive
progress we do not yet have a successful fully self-consistent chemodynamical
Bulge model in the cosmological framework, and we will also need more extensive
chrono-chemical-kinematic 3D map of stars to better constrain such models.Comment: 9 figures, 55 pages final version to appear in the Annual Reviews of
Astronomy & Astrophysics, volume 5
Abundances in the Galactic bulge: results from planetary nebulae and giant stars
Our understanding of the chemical evolution of the Galactic bulge requires
the determination of abundances in large samples of giant stars and planetary
nebulae (PNe). We discuss PNe abundances in the Galactic bulge and compare
these results with those presented in the literature for giant stars. We
present the largest, high-quality data-set available for PNe in the direction
of the Galactic bulge (inner-disk/bulge). For comparison purposes, we also
consider a sample of PNe in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We derive the
element abundances in a consistent way for all the PNe studied. By comparing
the abundances for the bulge, inner-disk, and LMC, we identify elements that
have not been modified during the evolution of the PN progenitor and can be
used to trace the bulge chemical enrichment history. We then compare the PN
abundances with abundances of bulge field giant. At the metallicity of the
bulge, we find that the abundances of O and Ne are close to the values for the
interstellar medium at the time of the PN progenitor formation, and hence these
elements can be used as tracers of the bulge chemical evolution, in the same
way as S and Ar, which are not expected to be affected by nucleosynthetic
processes during the evolution of the PN progenitors. The PN oxygen abundance
distribution is shifted to lower values by 0.3 dex with respect to the
distribution given by giants. A similar shift appears to occur for Ne and S. We
discuss possible reasons for this PNe-giant discrepancy and conclude that this
is probably due to systematic errors in the abundance derivations in either
giants or PNe (or both). We issue an important warning concerning the use of
absolute abundances in chemical evolution studies.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures, 16 pages of online material, A&A in pres
Nonlinear dispersion relation in anharmonic periodic mass-spring and mass-in-mass systems
The study of wave propagation in chains of anharmonic periodic systems is of
fundamental importance to understand the response of dynamical absorbers of
vibrations and acoustic metamaterials working in nonlinear regime. Here, we
derive an analytical nonlinear dispersion relation for periodic chains of
anharmonic mass-spring and mass-in-mass systems resulting from considering the
hypothesis of weak anharmonic energy and a periodic distribution function as
ansatz of a general solution of the nonlinear equations of motion. Numerical
simulations show that this expression is valid for anharmonic potential energy
up to 50% of the harmonic one. This work provides a simple tool to design and
study nonlinear dynamics for a class of seismic metamaterials.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
A new method for estimating the pattern speed of spiral structure in the Milky Way
In the last few decades many efforts have been made to understand the effect
of spiral arms on the gas and stellar dynamics in the Milky Way disc. One of
the fundamental parameters of the spiral structure is its angular velocity, or
pattern speed , which determines the location of resonances in the
disc and the spirals' radial extent. The most direct method for estimating the
pattern speed relies on backward integration techniques, trying to locate the
stellar birthplace of open clusters. Here we propose a new method based on the
interaction between the spiral arms and the stars in the disc. Using a sample
of around 500 open clusters from the {\it New Catalogue of Optically Visible
Open Clusters and Candidates}, and a sample of 500 giant stars observed by
APOGEE, we find km s kpc, for a local
standard of rest rotation ~km s and solar radius ~kpc.
Exploring a range in and within the acceptable values, 200-240 km
s and 7.5-8.5 kpc, respectively, results only in a small change in our
estimate of , that is within the error. Our result is in close
agreement with a number of studies which suggest values in the range 20-25 km
s kpc. An advantage of our method is that we do not need
knowledge of the stellar age, unlike in the case of the birthplace method,
which allows us to use data from large Galactic surveys. The precision of our
method will be improved once larger samples of disk stars with spectroscopic
information will become available thanks to future surveys such as 4MOST.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle: Planetary Nebulae as Green Galactic Citizens
We review gas-phase abundances in PNe and describe their dual utility as
archives of original progenitor metallicity via the alpha elements, as well as
sources of processed material from nucleosynthesis during the star's evolution,
i.e., C, N, and s-process elements. We describe the analysis of PN spectra to
derive abundances and discuss the discrepancies that arise from different
choices at each step. Abundance results for the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds
from various groups of investigators are presented; the observational results
are compared with theoretical predictions of AGB stellar yields. Finally, we
suggest areas where more work is needed to improve our abilities to determine
abundances in PNe.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Invited review presented at the IAU
Symposium No. 283, Planetary Nebulae: an Eye to the Futur
Galactic Archaeology with CoRoT and APOGEE: Creating mock observations from a chemodynamical model
In a companion paper, we have presented the combined
asteroseismic-spectroscopic dataset obtained from CoRoT lightcurves and APOGEE
infra-red spectra for 678 solar-like oscillating red giants in two fields of
the Galactic disc (CoRoGEE). We have measured chemical abundance patterns,
distances, and ages of these field stars which are spread over a large radial
range of the Milky Way's disc. Here we show how to simulate this dataset using
a chemodynamical Galaxy model. We also demonstrate how the observation
procedure influences the accuracy of our estimated ages.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. To appear in Astronomische Nachrichten, special
issue "Reconstruction the Milky Way's History: Spectroscopic surveys,
Asteroseismology and Chemo-dynamical models", Guest Editors C. Chiappini, J.
Montalb\'an, and M. Steffe
The effects of a Variable IMF on the Chemical Evolution of the Galaxy
In this work we explore the effects of adopting an initial mass function
(IMF) variable in time on the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. In order to do
that we adopt a chemical evolution model which assumes two main infall episodes
for the formation of the Galaxy. We study the effects on such a model of
different IMFs. First, we use a theoretical one based on the statistical
description of the density field arising from random motions in the gas. This
IMF is a function of time as it depends on physical conditions of the site of
star formation. We also investigate the behaviour of the model predictions
using other variable IMFs, parameterized as a function of metallicity. Our
results show that the theoretical IMF when applied to our model depends on time
but such time variation is important only in the early phases of the Galactic
evolution, when the IMF is biased towards massive stars. We also show that the
use of an IMF which is a stronger function of time does not lead to a good
agreement with the observational constraints suggesting that if the IMF varied
this variation should have been small. Our main conclusion is that the G-dwarf
metallicity distribution is best explained by infall with a large timescale and
a constant IMF, since it is possible to find variable IMFs of the kind studied
here, reproducing the G-dwarf metallicity but this worsens the agreement with
other observational constraints.Comment: 7 pages, to appear in "The Chemical Evolution of the Milky Way: Stars
vs Clusters", Vulcano, September 1999, F. Giovannelli and F. Matteucci eds.
(Kluwer, Dordrecht) in pres
High-resolution abundance analysis of red giants in the globular cluster NGC 6522
The [Sr/Ba] and [Y/Ba] scatter observed in some galactic halo stars that are
very metal-poor stars and in a few individual stars of the oldest known Milky
Way globular cluster NGC 6522,have been interpreted as evidence of early
enrichment by massive fast-rotating stars (spinstars). Because NGC 6522 is a
bulge globular cluster, the suggestion was that not only the very-metal poor
halo stars, but also bulge stars at [Fe/H]~-1 could be used as probes of the
stellar nucleosynthesis signatures from the earlier generations of massive
stars, but at much higher metallicity. For the bulge the suggestions were based
on early spectra available for stars in NGC 6522, with a medium resolution of
R~22,000 and a moderate signal-to-noise ratio. The main purpose of this study
is to re-analyse the NGC 6522 stars previously reported using new
high-resolution (R~45,000) and high signal-to-noise spectra (S/N>100). We aim
at re-deriving their stellar parameters and elemental ratios, in particular the
abundances of the neutron-capture s-process-dominated elements such as Sr, Y,
Zr, La, and Ba, and of the r-element Eu. High-resolution spectra of four giants
belonging to the bulge globular cluster NGC 6522 were obtained at the 8m VLT
UT2-Kueyen telescope with the UVES spectrograph in FLAMES-UVESconfiguration.
The spectroscopic parameters were derived based on the excitation and
ionization equilibrium of \ion{Fe}{I} and \ion{Fe}{II}. Our analysis confirms a
metallicity [Fe/H] = -0.95+-0.15 for NGC 6522, and the overabundance of the
studied stars in Eu (with +~0.2 < [Eu/Fe] < +~0.4) and alpha-elements O and Mg.
The neutron-capture s-element-dominated Sr, Y, Zr, Ba, La now show less
pronounced variations from star to star. Enhancements are in the range 0.0 <
[Sr/Fe] < +0.4, +0.23 < [Y/Fe] < +0.43, 0.0 < [Zr/Fe] < +0.4, 0.0 < [La/Fe] <
+0.35,and 0.05 < [Ba/Fe] < +0.55.Comment: date of acceptation: 31/07/2014, in press, 24 pages, 19
figures,Astronomy & Astrophysics, 201
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