1,603 research outputs found
Probing the Low Mass Stellar End of the eta Chamaeleontis Cluster
We have identified three faint new members of the eta Chamaeleontis cluster.
Spectral types of the new members are estimated to be ~M5 based on their TiO
band strengths and broadband colors. With an age of 5-8 Myr for the cluster,
masses of these new members are estimated to be ~0.08 Msun. All three display
strong Li 6708A absorption and Halpha emission features including one with
Halpha emission equivalent width ~60A along with HeI 6678 & 7605 A emission
features that are characteristics of classical T Tauri stars.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, accepted in Ap
No Open Cluster in the Ruprecht 93 Region
UBVI CCD photometry has been obtained for the Ruprecht 93 (Ru 93) region. We
were unable to confirm the existence of an intermediate-age open cluster in Ru
93 from the spatial distribution of blue stars. On the other hand, we found two
young star groups in the observed field: the nearer one (Ru 93 group) comprises
the field young stars in the Sgr-Car arm at d ~ 2.1 kpc, while the farther one
(WR 37 group) is the young stars around WR 37 at d ~ 4.8 kpc. We have derived
an abnormal extinction law (Rv = 3.5) in the Ruprecht 93 region.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, JKAS 2010, in press (Aug issue
Lithium Depletion Boundary in a Pre-Main Sequence Binary System
A lithium depletion boundary is detected in HIP 112312 (GJ 871.1 A and B), a
\~12 Myr old pre-main sequence binary system. A strong (EW 300 mA) Li 6708 A
absorption feature is seen at the secondary (~M4.5) while no Li 6708 A feature
is detected from the primary (~M4). The physical companionship of the two stars
is confirmed from common proper motions. Current theoretical pre-main sequence
evolutionary models cannot simultaneously match the observed colors,
brightnesses, and Li depletion patterns of this binary system. At the age upper
limit of 20 Myr, contemporary theoretical evolutionary models predict too slow
Li depletion. If true Li depletion is a faster process than predicted by
theoretical models, ages of open clusters (Pleiades, alpha Persei, and IC 2391)
estimated from the Li depletion boundary method are all overestimated. Because
of the importance of the open cluster age scale, development of self-consistent
theoretical models to match the HIP 112312 data is desirable.Comment: Accepted in ApJL. 5 pages total (3 tables, 3 figures
UBVI CCD Photometry of the Open Cluster NGC 4609 and Hogg 15
UBVI CCD photometry is obtained for the open clusters NGC 4609 and Hogg 15 in
Crux. For NGC 4609, CCD data are presented for the first time. From new
photometry we derive the reddening, distance modulus and age of each cluster -
NGC 4609 : E(B-V) = 0.37 +/- 0.03, V_0 - M_V = 10.60 +/- 0.08, log tau = 7.7
+/- 0.1; Hogg 15 : E(B-V) = 1.13 +/- 0.11, V_0 - M_V = 12.50 +/- 0.15, log tau
<= 6.6. The young age of Hogg 15 strongly implies that WR 47 is a member of the
cluster. We have also determined the mass function of these clusters and have
obtained a normal slope (Gamma = -1.2 +/- 0.3) for NGC 4609 and a somewhat
shallow slope (Gamma = -0.95 +/- 0.5) for Hogg 15.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, JKAS, in pres
CHORIZOS: a CHi-square cOde for parameteRized modelIng and characteriZation of phOtometry and Spectrophotometry
We have developed a CHi-square cOde for parameteRized modelIng and
characteriZation of phOtometry and Spectrophotometry (CHORIZOS). CHORIZOS can
use up to two intrinsic free parameters (e.g. temperature and gravity for
stars; type and redshift for galaxies; or age and metallicity for stellar
clusters) and two extrinsic ones (amount and type of extinction). The code uses
chi-square minimization to find all models compatible with the observed data in
the model N-dimensional (N=1,2,3,4) parameter space. CHORIZOS can use either
correlated or uncorrelated colors as input and is especially designed to
identify possible parameter degeneracies and multiple solutions. The code is
written in IDL and is available to the astronomical community. Here we present
the techniques used, test the code, apply it to a few well-known astronomical
problems, and suggest possible applications. As a first scientific result from
CHORIZOS, we confirm from photometry the need for a revised
temperature-spectral type scale for OB stars previously derived from
spectroscopy.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures. To appear in the September 2004 issue of PAS
Wavelength dependence of angular diameters of M giants: an observational perspective
We discuss the wavelength dependence of angular diameters of M giants from an
observational perspective. Observers cannot directly measure an optical-depth
radius for a star, despite this being a common theoretical definition. Instead,
they can use an interferometer to measure the square of the fringe visibility.
We present new plots of the wavelength-dependent centre-to-limb variation (CLV)
of intensity of the stellar disk as well as visibility for Mira and non-Mira M
giant models. We use the terms ``CLV spectra'' and ``visibility spectra'' for
these plots. We discuss a model-predicted extreme limb-darkening effect (also
called the narrow-bright-core effect) in very strong TiO bands which can lead
to a misinterpretation of the size of a star in these bands. We find no
evidence as yet that this effect occurs in real stars. Our CLV spectra can
explain the similarity in visibilities of R Dor (M8IIIe) that have been
observed recently despite the use of two different passbands. We compare
several observations with models and find the models generally under-estimate
the observed variation in visibility with wavelength. We present CLV and
visibility spectra for a model that is applicable to the M supergiant alpha
Ori.Comment: 16 pages with figures. Accepted by MNRA
SkyMapper and the Southern Sky Survey - a resource for the southern sky
SkyMapper is amongst the first of a new generation of dedicated, wide-field
survey telescopes. The 1.3m SkyMapper telescope features a 5.7 square degree
field-of-view Cassegrain imager and will see first light in late 2007. The
primary goal of the facility is to conduct the Southern Sky Survey a six
colour, six epoch survey of the southern sky. The survey will provide
photometry for objects between 8th and 23rd magnitude with global photometric
accuracy of 0.03 magnitudes and astrometry to 50 mas. This will represent a
valuable scientific resource for the southern sky and in addition provide a
basis for photometric and astrometric calibration of imaging data.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, proceedings of ESO Calibration Workshop 200
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