2,886 research outputs found
Massive stellar systems: observational challenges and perspectives in the E-ELT era
We introduce the empirical framework concerning optical and near-infrared (NIR) photometry of crowded stellar fields. In particular, we address the impact that linear detectors and analytical PSF played in improving the accuracy and the precision of multi-band color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs). We focus our attention on recent findings based on deep NIR images collected with Adaptive Optics (AO) systems at the 8-10m class telescopes and discuss pros and cons of the different approaches. We also discuss the estimate of the absolute age of globular clusters using a well defined knee along the lower main sequence. We mention the role which the current AO-assisted instruments will have in addressing longstanding astrophysical problems of the Galactic center. Finally, we outline the role of first generation of E-ELT instruments upon photometry and spectroscopy of crowded stellar fields
Optical and Near-Infrared UBVRIJHK Photometry for the RR Lyrae stars in the Nearby Globular Cluster M4 (NGC 6121)
We present optical and near-infrared UBVRIJHK photometry of stars in the
Galactic globular cluster M4 (NGC 6121) based upon a large corpus of
observations obtained mainly from public astronomical archives. We concentrate
on the RR Lyrae variable stars in the cluster, and make a particular effort to
accurately reidentify the previously discovered variables. We have also
discovered two new probable RR Lyrae variables in the M4 field: one of them by
its position on the sky and its photometric properties is a probable member of
the cluster, and the second is a probable background (bulge?) object. We
provide accurate equatorial coordinates for all 47 stars identified as RR
Lyraes, new photometric measurements for 46 of them, and new period estimates
for 45. We have also derived accurate positions and mean photometry for 34 more
stars previously identified as variable stars of other types, and for an
additional five non-RR Lyrae variable stars identified for the first time here.
We present optical and near-infrared color-magnitude diagrams for the cluster
and show the locations of the variable stars in them. We present the Bailey
(period-amplitude) diagrams and the period-frequency histogram for the RR Lyrae
stars in M4 and compare them to the corresponding diagrams for M5 (NGC 5904).
We conclude that the RR Lyrae populations in the two clusters are quite similar
in all the relevant properties that we have considered. The mean periods,
pulsation-mode ratios, and Bailey diagrams of these two clusters show support
for the recently proposed "Oosterhoff-neutral" classification.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figures, 7 table
On a new theoretical framework for RR Lyrae stars I: the metallicity dependence
We present new nonlinear, time-dependent convective hydrodynamical models of
RR Lyrae stars computed assuming a constant helium-to-metal enrichment ratio
and a broad range in metal abundances (Z=0.0001--0.02). The stellar masses and
luminosities adopted to construct the pulsation models were fixed according to
detailed central He burning Horizontal Branch evolutionary models. The
pulsation models cover a broad range in stellar luminosity and effective
temperatures and the modal stability is investigated for both fundamental and
first overtones. We predict the topology of the instability strip as a function
of the metal content and new analytical relations for the edges of the
instability strip in the observational plane. Moreover, a new analytical
relation to constrain the pulsation mass of double pulsators as a function of
the period ratio and the metal content is provided. We derive new
Period-Radius-Metallicity relations for fundamental and first-overtone
pulsators. They agree quite well with similar empirical and theoretical
relations in the literature. From the predicted bolometric light curves,
transformed into optical (UBVRI) and near-infrared (JHK) bands, we compute the
intensity-averaged mean magnitudes along the entire pulsation cycle and, in
turn, new and homogenous metal-dependent (RIJHK) Period-Luminosity relations.
Moreover, we compute new dual and triple band optical, optical--NIR and NIR
Period-Wesenheit-Metallicity relations. Interestingly, we find that the optical
Period-W(V,B-V) is independent of the metal content and that the accuracy of
individual distances is a balance between the adopted diagnostics and the
precision of photometric and spectroscopic datasets.Comment: 51 pages, 20 figures, 9 tables, accepted for publication on Ap
The Carina Project IX: on Hydrogen and helium burning variables
We present new multi-band (UBVI) time-series data of helium burning variables
in the Carina dwarf spheroidal galaxy. The current sample includes 92 RR
Lyrae-six of them are new identifications-and 20 Anomalous Cepheids, one of
which is new identification. The analysis of the Bailey diagram shows that the
luminosity amplitude of the first overtone component in double-mode variables
is located along the long-period tail of regular first overtone variables,
while the fundamental component is located along the short-period tale of
regular fundamental variables. This evidence further supports the transitional
nature of these objects. Moreover, the distribution of Carina double-mode
variables in the Petersen diagram (P_1/P_0 vs P_0) is similar to metal-poor
globulars (M15, M68), to the dwarf spheroidal Draco and to the Galactic Halo.
This suggests that the Carina old stellar population is metal-poor and affected
by a small spread in metallicity. We use trigonometric parallaxes for five
field RR Lyrae stars to provide an independent estimate of the Carina distance
using the observed reddening free Period--Wesenheit [PW, (BV)] relation. Theory
and observations indicate that this diagnostic is independent of metallicity.
We found a true distance modulus of \mu=20.01\pm0.02 (standard error of the
mean) \pm0.05 (standard deviation) mag. We also provided independent estimates
of the Carina true distance modulus using four predicted PW relations (BV, BI,
VI, BVI) and we found: \mu=(20.08\pm0.007\pm0.07) mag,
\mu=(20.06\pm0.006\pm0.06) mag, \mu=(20.07\pm0.008\pm0.08) mag and
\mu=(20.06\pm0.006\pm0.06) mag. Finally, we identified more than 100 new SX
Phoenicis stars that together with those already known in the literature (340)
make Carina a fundamental laboratory to constrain the evolutionary and
pulsation properties of these transitional variables.Comment: 44 pages, 13 tables, 13 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Rare Earth Elements abundance, fractionation, and anomalies in the sediments of the Cananéia-Iguape Estuarine-Lagoon Complex in Brazil
The Cananéia-Iguape Estuarine-Lagoon Complex (CIELC) is an extremely productive coastal ecosystem. It enclosesthe Valo Grande channel, built 160 years ago, which introduces water from the Ribeira River directly into the estuarinesystem, contributing to important biogeochemical changes in the region. Many nutrients arrive at the estuary throughthis channel, as well as metals and other slightly soluble elements that become part of the sediments. This studyaims to evaluate the processes that govern the distribution of rare earth elements (REE) in the sediments of thecomplex by using fractionation patterns, anomalies, and the geochemical signature of minerals to evaluate sources,natural levels, and the possible anthropogenic forcing to which CIELC is subjected. ∑REE* ranged from 14.2 to 285mg kg-1 and showed a distribution related to depositional/textural characteristics influenced by the regional and locallithological setting and a possible contamination. The REE/Al ratio indicated enrichment in the sea adjacent to theestuary and at stations in the Ribeira River and Valo Grande. While the Hf/Al ratio indicated natural enrichment relatedto the presence of heavy minerals in most of these stations, this ratio fails to justify enrichment at some stations inthe northern part of the estuary and the Ribeira River. Fractionation patterns and anomalies allowed us to identifythe main heavy minerals related to REE enrichment at CIELC. Cerium (Ce) anomalies showed a possible relationwith biologically mediated Ce+3 to Ce+4 oxidation processes in the most productive areas of the estuary. Europium(Eu) anomalies were strongly associated with different mineral assemblies in several CIELC sectors. Abundance,fractionation patterns, and REE anomalies corroborate the categorization of CIELC sediments as part of a pristinesystem in its southern region and as subject to anthropogenic influences in its northern area
Theoretical study of molecular electronic excitations and optical transitions of C60
We report results on ab initio calculations of excited states of the
fullerene molecule by using configuration interaction (CI) approach with singly
excited determinants (SCI). We have used both the experimental geometry and the
one optimized by the density functional method and worked with basis sets at
the cc-pVTZ and aug-cc-pVTZ level. Contrary to the early SCI semiempirical
calculations, we find that two lowest electron
optical lines are situated at relatively high energies of ~5.8 eV (214 nm) and
~6.3 eV (197 nm). These two lines originate from two transitions: from HOMO to (LUMO+1) () and from (HOMO--1)
to LUMO (). The lowest molecular excitation, which is the level, is found at ~2.5 eV. Inclusion of doubly excited determinants
(SDCI) leads only to minor corrections to this picture. We discuss possible
assignment of absorption bands at energies smaller than 5.8 eV (or
larger than 214 nm).Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, 9 Table
Discovery of optical pulsations in V2116 Ophiuchi/GX 1+4
We report the detection of pulsations with s period in V2116 Oph,
the optical counterpart of the low-mass X-ray binary GX 1+4. The pulsations are
sinusoidal with modulation amplitude of up to 4% in blue light and were
observed in ten different observing sessions during 1996 April-August using a
CCD photometer at the 1.6-m and 0.6-m telescopes of Laborat\'orio Nacional de
Astrof\'{\i}sica, in Brazil. The pulsations were also observed with the
fast photometer. With only one exception the observed optical periods are
consistent with those observed by the BATSE instrument on board the Compton
Gamma Ray Observatory at the same epoch. There is a definite correlation
between the observability of pulsations and the optical brightness of the
system: V2116~Oph had magnitude in the range when the pulsed
signal was detected, and when no pulsations were present. The
discovery makes GX 1+4 only the third of accretion-powered X-ray
pulsars to be firmly detected as a pulsating source in the optical. The
presence of flickering and pulsations in V2116 Oph adds strong evidence for an
accretion disk scenario in this system. The absolute magnitude of the pulsed
component on 1996 May 27 is estimated to be . The implied
dimensions for the emitting region are 1.1 R_{\sun}, 3.2 R_{\sun}, and 7.0
R_{\sun}, for black-body spectral distributions with K, K, and K, respectively.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures in PostScript, latex, accepted for publication on
the Astrophysical Journal Letter
Impact of distance determinations on Galactic structure. II. Old tracers
Here we review the efforts of a number of recent results that use old tracers
to understand the build up of the Galaxy. Details that lead directly to using
these old tracers to measure distances are discussed. We concentrate on the
following: (1) the structure and evolution of the Galactic bulge and inner
Galaxy constrained from the dynamics of individual stars residing therein; (2)
the spatial structure of the old Galactic bulge through photometric
observations of RR Lyrae-type stars; (3) the three\--dimensional structure,
stellar density, mass, chemical composition, and age of the Milky Way bulge as
traced by its old stellar populations; (4) an overview of RR Lyrae stars known
in the ultra-faint dwarfs and their relation to the Galactic halo; and (5)
different approaches for estimating absolute and relative cluster ages.Comment: Review article, 80 pages (25 figures); Space Science Reviews, in
press (chapter of a special collection resulting from the May 2016 ISSI-BJ
workshop on Astronomical Distance Determination in the Space Age
Stellar populations in the ELT perspective
We discuss the impact that the next generation of Extremely Large Telescopes
will have on the open astrophysical problems of resolved stellar populations.
In particular, we address the interplay between multiband photometry and
spectroscopy.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the proceedings of "EWASS 2013
Symposium 5: Local Group, Local Cosmology," (8-9 July 2013, Turku, Finland),
Mem. S.A.It, M. Monelli and S. Salvadori Ed
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