294 research outputs found
The massive star population of the Virgo Cluster galaxy NGC 4535
We analyzed the massive star population of the Virgo Cluster galaxy NGC 4535
using archival Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 images in
filters F555W and F814W, equivalent to Johnson V and Kron-Cousins I. We
performed high precision point spread function fitting photometry of 24353
sources including 3762 candidate blue supergiants, 841 candidate yellow
supergiants and 370 candidate red supergiants. We estimated the ratio of blue
to red supergiants as a decreasing function of galactocentric radius. Using
Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics isochrones at solar
metallicity, we defined the luminosity function and estimated the star
formation history of the galaxy over the last 60 Myrs. We conducted a
variability search in the V and I filters using three variability indexes: the
median absolute deviation, the interquartile range and the inverse von-Neumann
ratio. This analysis yielded 120 new variable candidates with absolute
magnitudes ranging from M = 4 to 11 mag. We used the MESA
evolutionary tracks at solar metallicity, to classify the variables based on
their absolute magnitude and their position on the color-magnitude diagram.
Among the new candidate variable sources are eight candidate variable red
supergiants, three candidate variable yellow supergiants and one candidate
luminous blue variable, which we suggest for follow-up observations.Comment: Accepted by A&A, 7 pages, 7 Tables, 53 figure
NELIOTA: The wide-field, high-cadence lunar monitoring system at the prime focus of the Kryoneri telescope
We present the technical specifications and first results of the ESA-funded,
lunar monitoring project "NELIOTA" (NEO Lunar Impacts and Optical TrAnsients)
at the National Observatory of Athens, which aims to determine the
size-frequency distribution of small Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) via detection of
impact flashes on the surface of the Moon. For the purposes of this project a
twin camera instrument was specially designed and installed at the 1.2 m
Kryoneri telescope utilizing the fast-frame capabilities of scientific
Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor detectors (sCMOS). The system provides
a wide field-of-view (17.0' 14.4') and simultaneous observations in
two photometric bands (R and I), reaching limiting magnitudes of 18.7 mag in 10
sec in both bands at a 2.5 signal-to-noise level. This makes it a unique
instrument that can be used for the detection of NEO impacts on the Moon, as
well as for any astronomy projects that demand high-cadence multicolor
observations. The wide field-of-view ensures that a large portion of the Moon
is observed, while the simultaneous, high-cadence, monitoring in two
photometric bands makes possible, for the first time, the determination of the
temperatures of the impacts on the Moon's surface and the validation of the
impact flashes from a single site. Considering the varying background level on
the Moon's surface we demonstrate that the NELIOTA system can detect NEO impact
flashes at a 2.5 signal-to-noise level of ~12.4 mag in the I-band and R-band
for observations made at low lunar phases ~0.1. We report 31 NEO impact flashes
detected during the first year of the NELIOTA campaign. The faintest flash was
at 11.24 mag in the R-band (about two magnitudes fainter than ever observed
before) at lunar phase 0.32. Our observations suggest a detection rate of events .Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Star complexes and stellar populations in NGC 6822 - Comparison with the Magellanic Clouds
The star complexes (large scale star forming regions) of NGC 6822 were traced
and mapped and their size distribution was compared with the size distribution
of star complexes in the Magellanic Clouds (MCs). Furthermore, the spatial
distributions of different age stellar populations were compared with each
other. The star complexes of NGC 6822 were determined by using the isopleths,
based on star counts, of the young stars of the galaxy, using a statistical
cutoff limit in density. In order to map them and determine their geometrical
properties, an ellipse was fitted to every distinct region satisfying this
minimum limit. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistical test was used to study
possible patterns in their size distribution. Isopleths were also used to study
the stellar populations of NGC 6822. The star complexes of NGC 6822 were
detected and a list of their positions and sizes was produced. Indications of
hierarchical star formation, in terms of spatial distribution, time evolution
and preferable sizes were found in NGC 6822 and the MCs. The spatial
distribution of the various age stellar populations has indicated traces of an
interaction in NGC 6822, dated before 350 +/- 50 Myr.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted by A&A; minor typeface correction
Comparative performance of selected variability detection techniques in photometric time series
Photometric measurements are prone to systematic errors presenting a
challenge to low-amplitude variability detection. In search for a
general-purpose variability detection technique able to recover a broad range
of variability types including currently unknown ones, we test 18 statistical
characteristics quantifying scatter and/or correlation between brightness
measurements. We compare their performance in identifying variable objects in
seven time series data sets obtained with telescopes ranging in size from a
telephoto lens to 1m-class and probing variability on time-scales from minutes
to decades. The test data sets together include lightcurves of 127539 objects,
among them 1251 variable stars of various types and represent a range of
observing conditions often found in ground-based variability surveys. The real
data are complemented by simulations. We propose a combination of two indices
that together recover a broad range of variability types from photometric data
characterized by a wide variety of sampling patterns, photometric accuracies,
and percentages of outlier measurements. The first index is the interquartile
range (IQR) of magnitude measurements, sensitive to variability irrespective of
a time-scale and resistant to outliers. It can be complemented by the ratio of
the lightcurve variance to the mean square successive difference, 1/h, which is
efficient in detecting variability on time-scales longer than the typical time
interval between observations. Variable objects have larger 1/h and/or IQR
values than non-variable objects of similar brightness. Another approach to
variability detection is to combine many variability indices using principal
component analysis. We present 124 previously unknown variable stars found in
the test data.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables; accepted to MNRAS; for additional
plots, see http://scan.sai.msu.ru/~kirx/var_idx_paper
The Hubble Catalog of Variables
We aim to construct an exceptionally deep (V ~< 27) catalog of variable
objects in selected Galactic and extragalactic fields visited multiple times by
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). While HST observations of some of these
fields were searched for specific types of variables before (most notably, the
extragalactic Cepheids), we attempt a systematic study of the population of
variable objects of all types at the magnitude range not easily accessible with
ground-based telescopes. The variability timescales that can be probed range
from hours to years depending on how often a particular field has been visited.
For source extraction and cross-matching of sources between visits we rely on
the Hubble Source Catalog which includes 10^7 objects detected with WFPC2, ACS,
and WFC3 HST instruments. The lightcurves extracted from the HSC are corrected
for systematic effects by applying local zero-point corrections and are
screened for bad measurements. For each lightcurve we compute variability
indices sensitive to a broad range of variability types. The indices
characterize the overall lightcurve scatter and smoothness. Candidate variables
are selected as having variability index values significantly higher than
expected for objects of similar brightness in the given set of observations.
The Hubble Catalog of Variables will be released in 2018.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, proceedings of the 22nd Los Alamos
Stellar Pulsation Conference "Wide-field variability surveys: a 21st-century
perspective" held in San Pedro de Atacama, Chile, Nov. 28-Dec. 2, 201
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