206 research outputs found
Oscillator Strengths and Damping Constants for Atomic Lines in the J and H Bands
We have built a line list in the near-infrared J and H bands (1.00-1.34,
1.49-1.80 um) by gathering a series of laboratory and computed line lists.
Oscillator strengths and damping constants were computed or obtained by fitting
the solar spectrum.
The line list presented in this paper is, to our knowledge, the most complete
one now available, and supersedes previous lists.Comment: Accepted, Astrophysical Journal Supplement, tentatively scheduled for
the Sep. 1999 Vol. 124 #1 issue. Text and tables also available at
http://www.iagusp.usp.br/~jorge
The Chemical Composition and Age of the Metal-Poor Halo Star BD +17^\circ 3248
We have combined new high-resolution spectra obtained with the Hubble Space
Telescope (HST) and ground-based facilities to make a comprehensive new
abundance analysis of the metal-poor, halo star BD +17^\circ 3248. We have
detected the third r-process peak elements osmium, platinum, and (for the first
time in a metal-poor star) gold, elements whose abundances can only be reliably
determined using HST. Our observations illustrate a pattern seen in other
similar halo stars with the abundances of the heavier neutron-capture elements,
including the third r-process peak elements, consistent with a scaled solar
system r-process distribution. The abundances of the lighter neutron-capture
elements, including germanium and silver, fall below that same scaled solar
r-process curve, a result similar to that seen in the ultra-metal-poor star CS
22892--052. A single site with two regimes or sets of conditions, or perhaps
two different sites for the lighter and heavier neutron-capture elements, might
explain the abundance pattern seen in this star. In addition we have derived a
reliable abundance for the radioactive element thorium. We tentatively identify
U II at 3859 A in the spectrum of BD +17^\circ 3248, which makes this the
second detection of uranium in a very metal-poor halo star. Our combined
observations cover the widest range in proton number (from germanium to
uranium) thus far of neutron-capture elements in metal-poor Galactic halo
stars. Employing the thorium and uranium abundances in comparison with each
other and with several stable elements, we determine an average
cosmochronological age for BD +17^\circ 3248 of 13.8 +/- 4 Gyr, consistent with
that found for other similar metal-poor halo stars.Comment: 58 pages, 4 tables, 11 figures; To appear in ApJ Typo correcte
Improved Color-Temperature Relations and Bolometric Corrections for Cool Stars
We present new grids of colors and bolometric corrections for F-K stars
having 4000 K < Teff < 6500 K, 0.0 < log g < 4.5 and -3.0 < [Fe/H] < 0.0. A
companion paper extends these calculations into the M giant regime. Colors are
tabulated for Johnson U-V and B-V; Cousins V-R and V-I; Johnson-Glass V-K, J-K
and H-K; and CIT/CTIO V-K, J-K, H-K and CO. We have developed these
color-temperature (CT) relations by convolving synthetic spectra with
photometric filter-transmission-profiles. The synthetic spectra have been
computed with the SSG spectral synthesis code using MARCS stellar atmosphere
models as input. Both of these codes have been improved substantially,
especially at low temperatures, through the incorporation of new opacity data.
The resulting synthetic colors have been put onto the observational systems by
applying color calibrations derived from models and photometry of field stars
which have Teffs determined by the infrared-flux method. The color calibrations
have zero points and slopes which change most of the original synthetic colors
by less than 0.02 mag and 5%, respectively. The adopted Teff scale (Bell &
Gustafsson 1989) is confirmed by the extraordinary agreement between the
predicted and observed angular diameters of the field stars. We have also
derived empirical CT relations from the field-star photometry. Except for the
coolest dwarfs (Teff < 5000 K), our calibrated, solar-metallicity model colors
are found to match these and other empirical relations quite well. Our
calibrated, 4 Gyr, solar-metallicity isochrone also provides a good match to
color-magnitude diagrams of M67. We regard this as evidence that our calibrated
colors can be applied to many astrophysical problems, including modelling the
integrated light of galaxies. (abridged)Comment: To appear in the March 2000 issue of the Astronomical Journal. 72
pages including 16 embedded postscript figures (one page each) and 6 embedded
postscript tables (18 pages total
Oxygen Gas Phase Abundance Revisited
We present new measurements of the interstellar gas-phase oxygen abundance
along the sight lines towards 19 early-type galactic stars at an average
distance of 2.6 kpc. We derive O {\small I} column densities from {\it
HST}/STIS observations of the weak 1355 \AA intersystem transition. We derive
total hydrogen column densities [N(H {\small I})+2N(H)] using {\it
HST}/STIS observations of \lya and {\it FUSE} observations of molecular
hydrogen. The molecular hydrogen content of these sight lines ranges from
f(H) = 2N(H)/[N(H {\small I})+2N(H)] = 0.03 to 0.47. The average
of 6.3 cm mag with a standard
deviation of 15% is consistent with previous surveys. The mean oxygen abundance
along these sight lines, which probe a wide range of galactic environments in
the distant ISM, is 10 \oh = (1 in the mean). %(1 ). We see no evidence for decreasing
gas-phase oxygen abundance with increasing molecular hydrogen fraction and the
relative constancy of \oh suggests that the component of dust containing the
oxygen is not readily destroyed. We estimate that, if 60% of the dust grains
are resilient against destruction by shocks, the distant interstellar total
oxygen abundance can be reconciliated with the solar value derived from the
most recent measurements %by Holweger and by Allende Prieto, Lambert & Asplund:
of 10 \oh = 517 58 (1 ). We note that the smaller
oxygen abundances derived for the interstellar gas within 500 pc %by Meyer,
Cardelli & Jura or from nearby B star surveys are consistent with a local
elemental deficit.Comment: 9 figures, 37 page
The HgMn Binary Star Phi Herculis: Detection and Properties of the Secondary and Revision of the Elemental Abundances of the Primary
Observations of the Mercury-Manganese star Phi Herculis with the Navy
Prototype Optical Interferometer (NPOI) conclusively reveal the previously
unseen companion in this single-lined binary system. The NPOI data were used to
predict a spectral type of A8V for the secondary star Phi Her B. This
prediction was subsequently confirmed by spectroscopic observations obtained at
the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory. Phi Her B is rotating at 50 +/-3
km/sec, in contrast to the 8 km/sec lines of Phi Her A. Recognizing the lines
from the secondary permits one to separate them from those of the primary. The
abundance analysis of Phi Her A shows an abundance pattern similar to those of
other HgMn stars with Al being very underabundant and Sc, Cr, Mn, Zn, Ga, Sr,
Y, Zr, Ba, Ce, and Hg being very overabundant.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 45 pages, 11 figure
Keck-Nirspec Infrared OH Lines: Oxygen Abundances in Metal-Poor Stars Down to [Fe/H] = -2.9
Infrared OH lines at 1.5 - 1.7 um in the H band were obtained with the
NIRSPEC high-resolution spectrograph at the 10m Keck Telescope for a sample of
seven metal-poor stars. Detailed analyses have been carried out, based on
optical high-resolution data obtained with the FEROS spectrograph at ESO.
Stellar parameters were derived by adopting infrared flux method effective
temperatures, trigonometric and/or evolutionary gravities and metallicities
from FeII lines. We obtain that the sample stars with metallicities [Fe/H] <
-2.2 show a mean oxygen abundance [O/Fe] ~ 0.54, for a solar oxygen abundance
of epsilon(O) = 8.87, or [O/Fe] ~ 0.64 if epsilon(O) = 8.77 is assumed.Comment: To be published in ApJ 575 (August 10
Distribution of the retrotransposable element 412 in Drosophila species
Copy numbers of sequences homologous to the Drosophila melanogaster retrotransposable element 412, their dis tribution between the chromosome arms and the chromocenter, and whether they contain full-size copies were
analyzed for 55 species of the Drosophila genus. Element 412 insertion sites were detected on the chromosome
arms of D. melanogaster, Drosophila simulans, and a few species of the obscura group, but the chromocenter was
labeled in almost all species. The presence of element 412 sequences in the majority of species shows that this
element has a long evolutionary history in Drosophilidae, although it may have recently invaded the chromosomes
in some species, such as D. simulans. Differences in copy number between species may be due to population size
or specific endogenous or environmental factors and may follow the worldwide invasion of the species. Putative
full-length copies were detected in the chromocenters of some species with no copies on the chromosome arms,
suggesting that the chromocenter may be a shelter for such copies and not only for deleted ones.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
High-Resolution Spectroscopy of Extremely Metal-Poor Stars from SDSS/SEGUE: I. Atmospheric Parameters and Chemical Compositions
Chemical compositions are determined based on high-resolution spectroscopy for 137 candidate extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and its first stellar extension, the Sloan Extension for Galactic Understanding and Exploration (SEGUE). High-resolution spectra with moderate signal-to-noise (S/N) ratios were obtained with the High Dispersion Spectrograph of the Subaru Telescope. Most of the sample (approximately 80%) are main-sequence turnoff stars, including dwarfs and subgiants. Four cool main-sequence stars, the most metal-deficient such stars known, are included in the remaining sample. Good agreement is found between effective temperatures estimated by the SEGUE stellar parameter pipeline, based on the SDSS/SEGUE medium-resolution spectra, and those estimated from the broadband (V – K)[subscript 0] and (g – r)[subscript 0] colors. Our abundance measurements reveal that 70 stars in our sample have [Fe/H] +0.7) among the 25 giants in our sample is as high as 36%, while only a lower limit on the fraction (9%) is estimated for turnoff stars. This paper is the first of a series of papers based on these observational results. The following papers in this series will discuss the higher-resolution and higher-S/N observations of a subset of this sample, the metallicity distribution function, binarity, and correlations between the chemical composition and kinematics of extremely metal-poor stars
Differential Dynamics of Transposable Elements during Long-Term Diploidization of Nicotiana Section Repandae (Solanaceae) Allopolyploid Genomes
PubMed ID: 23185607This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Tracing the evolution of NGC6397 through the chemical composition of its stellar populations
With the aim to constrain multiple populations in the metal-poor globular
cluster NGC6397, we analyse and discuss the chemical compositions of a large
number of elements in 21 red giant branch stars. High-resolution spectra were
obtained with the FLAMES/UVES spectrograph on VLT. We have determined non-LTE
abundances of Na and LTE abundances for the remaining 21 elements, including O,
Mg, Al, alpha, iron-peak, and neutron-capture elements, many of which have not
previously been analysed for this cluster. We have also considered the
influence of possible He enrichment in the analysis of stellar spectra. We find
that the Na abundances of evolved, as well as unevolved, stars show a distinct
bimodality, which suggests the presence of two stellar populations; one
primordial stellar generation with composition similar to field stars, and a
second generation that is enriched in material processed through
hydrogen-burning (enriched in Na and Al and depleted in O and Mg). The cluster
is dominated (75%) by the second generation. The red giant branch show a
similar bimodal distribution in the Stroemgren colour index c_y=c_1-(b-y),
implying a large difference also in N abundance. The two populations have the
same composition of all analysed elements heavier than Al, within the
measurement uncertainty of the analysis, with the possible exception of [Y/Fe].
Using two stars with close to identical stellar parameters, one from each
generation, we estimate the difference in He content, Delta Y=0.01+-0.06, given
the assumption that the mass fraction of iron is the same for the stars.
Finally, we show that winds from fast rotating massive stars of the first
generation can be held responsible for the abundance patterns observed in
NGC6397 second generation long-lived stars and estimate that the initial mass
of the cluster were at least ten times higher than its present-day value.Comment: 13 pages + appendix with two tables. Accepted for publication in A&A.
v2: minor language corrections and Table A.2. correcte
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