535 research outputs found

    Accurate radial velocity and metallicity of the Large Magellanic Cloud old globular clusters NGC1928 and NGC1939

    Get PDF
    We present results obtained from spectroscopic observations of red giants located in the fields of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) globular clusters (GCs) NGC1928 and NGC1939. We used the GMOS and AAOmega+2dF spectrographs to obtain spectra centred on the Ca II triplet, from which we derived individual radial velocities (RVs) and metallicities. From cluster members we derived mean RVs of RVNGC1928 = 249.58±4.65 km s-1 and RVNGC1939 = 258.85±2.08 km s-1, and mean metallicities of [Fe/H]NGC1928 = -1.30±0.15 dex and [Fe/H]NGC1939 = -2.00±0.15 dex. We found that both GCs have RVs and positions consistent with being part of the LMC disc, so that we rule out any possible origin, but in the same galaxy. By computing the best solution of a disc that fully contains each GC, we obtained circular velocities for the 15 known LMC GCs. We found that 11/15 of the GCs share the LMC rotation derived from HST and Gaia DR2 proper motions. This outcome reveals that the LMC disc existed since the very early epoch of the galaxy formation and experienced the steep relatively fast chemical enrichment shown by its GC metallicities. The four remaining GCs turned out to have circular velocities not compatible with an in situ cluster formation, but rather with being stripped from the SMC.Fil: Piatti, Andres Eduardo. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Hwang, N.. Korea Astronomy And Space Science Institute; Corea del SurFil: Cole, A. A.. University of Tasmania; AustraliaFil: Angelo, M. S.. Laboratorio Nacional de Astrofisica; BrasilFil: Emptage, B.. University of Tasmania; Australi

    Probing the LMC age gap at intermediate cluster masses

    Full text link
    The LMC has a rich star cluster system spanning a wide range of ages and masses. One striking feature of the LMC cluster system is the existence of an age gap between 3-10 Gyrs. But this feature is not as clearly seen among field stars. Three LMC fields containing relatively poor and sparse clusters whose integrated colours are consistent with those of intermediate age simple stellar populations have been imaged in BVI with the Optical Imager (SOI) at the Southern Telescope for Astrophysical Research (SOAR). A total of 6 clusters, 5 of them with estimated initial masses M < 10^4M_sun, were studied in these fields. Photometry was performed and Colour-Magnitude Diagrams (CMD) were built using standard point spread function fitting methods. The faintest stars measured reach V ~ 23. The CMD was cleaned from field contamination by making use of the three-dimensional colour and magnitude space available in order to select stars in excess relative to the field. A statistical CMD comparison method was developed for this purpose. The subtraction method has proven to be successful, yielding cleaned CMDs consistent with a simple stellar population. The intermediate age candidates were found to be the oldest in our sample, with ages between 1-2 Gyrs. The remaining clusters found in the SOAR/SOI have ages ranging from 100 to 200 Myrs. Our analysis has conclusively shown that none of the relatively low-mass clusters studied by us belongs to the LMC age-gap.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Accepted to MNRA

    Open Cluster Characterization via Cross-Correlation with Spectral Library

    Get PDF
    We present a characterization method based on spectral cross-correlation to obtain the physical parameters of the controversial stellar aggregate ESO442-SC04. The data used was obtained with GMOS at Gemini-South telescope including 17 stars in the central region of the ob ject and 6 standard-stars. FXCOR was used in an iterative process to obtain self-consistent radial velocities for the standard-stars and averaged radial velocities for the science spectra. Spectral types, effective temperature, suface gravity and metallicities parameters were determined using FXCOR to correlate cluster spectra with ELODIE spectral library and selecting the best correlation matches using the Tonry and Davis Ratio (TDR). Analysis of the results suggests that the stars in ESO442-SC04 are not bound and therefore they do not constitute a physical system.Comment: 4-page paper from IAU symposium 266. Contains 3 eps figures and IAU document class file 'iau.cls

    Clump stars in the Solar Neighbourhood

    Get PDF
    Hipparcos data has allowed the identification of a large number of clump stars in the Solar Neighbourhood. We discuss our present knowledge about their distributions of masses, ages, colours, magnitudes, and metallicities. We point out that the age distribution of clump stars is ``biased'' towards intermediate-ages. Therefore, the metallicity information they contain is different from that provided by the local G dwarfs. Since accurate abundance determinations are about to become available, these may provide useful constraints to chemical evolution models of the local disc.Comment: 6 pages, proc. of the Sept. 20-24, 1999 Vulcano Workshop "The chemical evolution of the Milky Way: stars vs. clusters", eds. F. Matteucci, F. Giovanell

    Basis for a SOAR Optical Imager Pipeline

    Get PDF
    The development of CCD mosaics had been incorporated into the majority of the recent observing facilities, including on SOAR. We discuss the treatment of mosaic CCD exposures including basic instrumental calibration, the creation of bad pixel masks, the removal of cosmic rays and fringes by sky flat-fielding, the set up of a World Coordinate System by astrometric calibration and the removal of the gap by the creation of single, deep images out of a set of dithered exposures. We have assembled these image treatment programs on a series of semi-automated IRAF scripts1 to handle the reduction of general SOAR Optical Imager (SOI) images requiring little on none user interaction.El desarrollo de mosaicos CCD ha sido incorporado recientemente en la mayor´ıa de los observatorios modernos, entre ellos SOAR. En este trabajo describimos el tratamiento de im´agenes mosaico SOAR en sus diferentes etapas: calibraciones instrumentales b´asicas, generaci´on de una m´ascara para eliminaci´on de pixeles malos, remoci´on de rayos c´osmicos y fringes, ajuste del WCS a trav´es de calibraciones astrom´etricas y remoci´on de gaps en la imagen simple profunda generada a partir de varias im´agenes mosaico. Hemos redactado diferentes rutinas de procesamiento de dichas im´agenes para que puedan ser ejecutadas de un modo semi-autom´atico dentro de un entormo IRAF.Fil: Maia, F. F. S.. Universidade Federal do Minas Gerais; BrasilFil: Piatti, Andres Eduardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciónes Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de Astronomía y Física del Espacio. - Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Astronomía y Física del Espacio; ArgentinaFil: Santos, J. F. C.. Universidade Federal do Minas Gerais; BrasilFil: Corradi, W. J. B.. Universidade Federal do Minas Gerais; Brasi

    A New Giant Branch Clump Structure In the Large Magellanic Cloud

    Get PDF
    We present Washington C, T1 CCD photometry of 21 fields located in the northern part of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), and spread over a region of more than 2.52 degrees approximately 6 degrees from the bar. The surveyed areas were chosen on the basis of their proximity to SL 388 and SL 509, whose fields showed the presence of a secondary giant clump, observationally detected by Bica et al. (1998, AJ, 116, 723). From the collected data we found that most of the observed field CMDs do not show a separate secondary clump, but rather a continuous vertical structure (VS), which is clearly seen for the first time. Its position and size are nearly the same throughout the surveyed regions: it lies below the Red Giant Clump (RGC) and extends from the bottom of the RGC to approximately 0.45 mag fainter, spanning the bluest color range of the RGC. The more numerous the VS stars in a field, the larger the number of LMC giants in the same zone. Our analysis demonstrate that VS stars belong to the LMC and are most likely the consequence of some kind of evolutionary process in the LMC, particularly in those LMC regions with a noticeable large giant population. Our results suggest that in order to trigger the formation of VS stars, there should be other conditions besides the appropriate age, metallicity, and the necessary red giant star density. Indeed, stars satisfying the requisites mentioned above are commonly found throughout the LMC, but the VS phenomenon is only clearly seen in some isolated regions. Finally, the fact that clump stars have an intrinsic luminosity dispersion further constrains the use of the clump magnitude as a reliable distance indicator.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables; to be published in AJ, Dec. issu

    The Initial Mass Function of the Stellar Association NGC 602 in the Small Magellanic Cloud with Hubble Space Telescope ACS Observations

    Full text link
    We present our photometric study of the stellar association NGC 602 in the wing of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). The data were taken in the filters F555W and F814W using the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on-board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Photometry was performed using the ACS module of the stellar photometry package DOLPHOT. We detected more than 5,500 stars with a magnitude range of 14 \lsim m_{555} \lsim 28 mag. Three prominent stellar concentrations are identified with star counts in the observed field, the association NGC 602 itself, and two clusters, one of them not being currently in any known catalog. The Color-Magnitude Diagrams (CMDs) of both clusters show features typical for young open clusters, while that of the association reveals bright main sequence (MS) and faint pre-main sequence (PMS) stars as the members of the system. We construct the initial mass spectrum (IMS) of the association by applying an age-independent method of counting the PMS stars within evolutionary tracks, while for the bright MS stars we transform their magnitudes to masses with the use of mass-luminosity relations. The IMS of NGC 602 is found to be well represented by a single-power law, corresponding to an Initial Mass Function (IMF) of slope \Gamma\approx -1.2 for 1 \lsim M/M{\solar} \lsim 45. This indicates that the shape of the IMF of a star forming system in the SMC for stars with masses higher than 1 M{\solar} seems to be quite similar to the field IMF in the solar neighborhood.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 13 pages, 14 figures, emulateapj.cls LaTeX style, full resolution version available on http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~dgoulier/Science/NGC602/ms.pd

    Statistics of Stellar Populations of Star Clusters and Surrounding Fields in the Outer Disk of the Large Magellanic Cloud

    Get PDF
    A comparative analysis of Washington color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) for 14 star clusters and respective surrounding fields in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) outer disk is presented. Each CCD frame including field and respective cluster covers an area of 185 arcmin^2. The stellar population sampled is of intermediate age and metallicity. CMD radial analysis involving star count ratios, morphology and integrated light properties are carried out. Luminosity functions (LFs) are also presented. Two main results are: (i) Within the range 4<R(kpc)<8, the distance from the LMC center is well correlated with the average age in the sense that inner fields are younger and; (ii) Beyond approximately 8kpc the outer fields do not show evidence of a significant intermediate-age component in their stellar populations, as inferred from red giant clump star counts.Comment: 27 pages, 4 tables, 11 figures; accepted by the A

    A low-absorption disk zone at low Galactic latitude in Centaurus

    Get PDF
    We investigate the properties of two stellar concentrations in a low-absorption disk zone in Centaurus, located respectively at =306.47\ell=306.47^{\circ}, b=0.61b=-0.61 ^{\circ}, and =307.01\ell=307.01^{\circ}, b=0.74b=-0.74 ^{\circ}. The present analysis is based mostly on 2MASS photometry, as well as optical photometry. Based on colour-magnitude diagrams and stellar radial density profiles, we show that these concentrations are not open star clusters. Instead, they appear to be field stars seen through a differentially-reddened window. We estimate that the bulk of the stars in both stellar concentrations is located at 1.5\sim1.5 kpc from the Sun, a distance consistent with that of the Sgr-Car arm in that direction. This low-absorption window allows one to probe into distant parts of the disk besides the Sgr-Car arm, probably the tangent part of the Sct-Cru arm, and/or the far side of the Sgr-Car arm in that direction. The main sequence associated to the Sgr-Car arm is reddened by \ebv\sim0.5, so that this window through the disk is comparable in reddening to Baade's window to the bulge. We also investigate the nature of the open cluster candidate Ru 166. The presently available data do not allow us to conclude whether Ru 166 is an actual open cluster or field stars seen through a small-scale low-absorption window

    Caracterización de cúmulos abiertos a través de correlaciones cruzadas con librerías de espectros

    Get PDF
    We present a characterization method based on spectral cross-correlation to obtain the physical parameters of the controversial stellar aggregate ESO 442-SC04. The data used was obtained with GMOS at Gemini-South telescope. Spectral types, effective temperature, suface gravity and metallicities parameters were determined using FXCOR to correlate cluster spectra with ELODIE spectral library and selecting the best correlation matches using the Tonry and Davis Ratio (TDR). Analysis of the results suggests that the stars in ESO 442-SC04 are not bound and therefore they do not constitute a physical system.En este trabajo presentamos un m´etodo de caracterizacion basado en la correlacion cruzada de espectros de estrellas en el controvertido objeto ESO 442-SC04. Utilizamos espectros obtenidos con el multiespectrografo GMOS del telescopio Gemini Sur. Determinamos tipos espectrales, velocidades radiales, temperaturas efectivas y gravedades superficiales empleando la tarea FXCOR de IRAF, para correlacionar los espectros estelares observados con los de la librerıa ELODIE, en combinacion con la razon Tonry-Davis para seleccionar el mejor ajuste. Un analisis de los resultados sugiere que las estrellas observadas en ESO 442- SC04 no constituyen un sistema fısico.Fil: Maia, F. F. S.. Universidade Federal do Minas Gerais; BrasilFil: Santos Jr, Joâo F. C.. Universidade Federal do Minas Gerais; BrasilFil: Corradi, W. J. B.. Universidade Federal do Minas Gerais; BrasilFil: Piatti, Andres Eduardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciónes Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de Astronomía y Física del Espacio. - Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Astronomía y Física del Espacio; Argentin
    corecore