860 research outputs found
The Stellar Population of the M31 Spiral Arm Around OB Association A24
A study of the stellar population of the M31 spiral arm around OB association
A24 was carried out based on the photometric data obtained from deep V and JHK
imaging. The luminosity function was obtained for -7 <~ Mbol <~ -3.5 by
applying the extinction correction corresponding to Av=1 and the bolometric
correction BC(K) as an empirical function of (J-K)o. In comparing the observed
color-luminosity diagrams with semitheoretical isochrones modified for the
dust-shell effects, we found the young population of t <~ 30 Myr with
supergiants of Mbol <~ -5, the bulk of the intermediate-age population of t ~
0.2 - 2.5 Gyr with bright asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars of -5 <~ Mbol <~
-4, and old populations of t ~> 3 Gyr with AGB and red giant branch (RGB) stars
of Mbol ~> -4. The average star formation rate was estimated to be ~1.8x10^4
M_o/Myr and ~0.7x10^4 M_o/Myr per deprojected disk area of 1 kpc^2 from the
number density of B0 V stars around Mv=-4.0 (age ~10 Myr) and the number
density of bright AGB stars around Mbol = -4.3 (age ~1 Gyr), respectively. A
study of the local variation in the V and the J and H luminosity functions
revealed a kind of anticorrelation between the population of the young
component and that of the intermediate-age component when subdomains of ~100 pc
scales were concerned. This finding suggests that the disk domain around the
A24 area experienced a series of star formation episodes alternatively among
different subdomains with a timescale of a few spiral passage periods. Brief
discussions are given about the interstellar extinction and about the lifetimes
of bright AGB stars and the highly red objects (HROs) in the same area.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, accepted: ApJ, July 1, 199
Identification of 13 Cepheids and 333 Other Variables in M31
We present Cousins and band photometry of variable stars in a
region in the disk of M31 galaxy, obtained during 141
nights. Of the 26 Cepheid variables present in the region, two are newly
discovered, 11 are classified as Cepheids for the first time and 13 are
confirmed as Cepheids. The extensive photometry of these Cepheids enabled us to
determine precise phase and amplitude of pulsation which ranges from 0.11 to
0.48 mag in band. The period of variability ranges from 7.5 to 56
days. The period-luminosity diagram is used to derive a distance modulus of
24.490.11 mag for M31 galaxy. We also report variability in 333 other
stars, of them, 115 stars appear to be long period variables, 2 suspected
eclipsing binaries and remaining 216 are irregular variables.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 9 figures, the paper and figures
with better resolution can be downloaded from
http://cdfinfo.in2p3.fr/Downloads/cosmobs/yogesh/paper
Four Brown Dwarfs in the Taurus Star-Forming Region
We have identified four brown dwarfs in the Taurus star-forming region. They
were first selected from and CCD photometry of 2.29 square degrees
obtained at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Subsequently, they were
recovered in the 2MASS second incremental data release point source catalog.
Low-resolution optical spectra obtained at the William Herschel telescope allow
us to derive spectral types in the range M7--M9. One of the brown dwarfs has
very strong H emission (EW=-340 \AA). It also displays Br
emission in an infrared spectrum obtained with IRCS on the Subaru telescope,
suggesting that it is accreting matter from a disk. The \ion{K}{1} resonance
doublet and the \ion{Na}{1} subordinate doublet at 818.3 and 819.5 nm in these
Taurus objects are weaker than in field dwarfs of similar spectral type,
consistent with low surface gravities as expected for young brown dwarfs. Two
of the objects are cooler and fainter than GG Tau Bb, the lowest mass known
member of the Taurus association. We estimate masses of only 0.03 M for
them. The spatial distribution of brown dwarfs in Taurus hints to a possible
anticorrelation between the density of stars and the density of brown dwarfs.Comment: ApJ Letters (in press
A Survey of Local Group Galaxies Currently Forming Stars. I. UBVRI Photometry of Stars in M31 and M33
We present UBVRI photometry obtained from Mosaic images of M31 and M33 using
the KPNO 4-m telescope. The survey covers 2.2 sq degrees of M31, and 0.8 sq
degrees of M33, chosen so as to include all of the regions currently active in
forming massive stars. The catalog contains 371,781 and 146,622 stars in M31
and M33, respectively, where every star has a counterpart (at least) in B, V,
and R. We compare our photometry to previous studies. We provide cross
references to the stars confirmed as members by spectroscopy, and compare the
location of these to the complete set in color-magnitude diagrams. While
follow-up spectroscopy is needed for many projects, we demonstrate the success
of our photometry in being able to distinguish M31/M33 members from foreground
Galactic stars. We also present the results of newly obtained spectroscopy,
which identifies 34 newly confirmed members, including B-A supergiants, the
earliest O star known in M31, and two new Luminous Blue Variable candidates
whose spectra are similar to that of P Cygni.Comment: Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. A version with higher
resolution figures can be found at:
http://www.lowell.edu/users/massey/M3133.pdf.g
Strong-field general relativity and quasi-periodic oscillations in x-ray binaries
Quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) at frequencies near 1000 Hz were recently
discovered in several x-ray binaries containing neutron stars. Two sources show
no correlation between QPO frequency and source count rate (Berger et al. 1996,
Zhang et al. 1996). We suggest that the QPO frequency is determined by the
Keplerian orbital frequency near the marginally stable orbit predicted by
general relativity in strong gravitational fields (Muchotrzeb-Czerny 1986,
Paczynski 1987, Kluzniak et al. 1990). The QPO frequencies observed from 4U
1636-536 imply that the mass of the neutron star is 2.02 +/- 0.12 solar masses.
Interpretation of the 4.1 keV absorption line observed from 4U 1636-536 (Waki
et al. 1984) as due to Fe XXV ions then implies a neutron star radius of 9.6
+/-0.6 km.Comment: 4 pages, uses aas2pp4.sty, submitted to ApJ
Photometric Calibration of the First 1.5 Years of the Pan-STARRS1 Survey
We present a precise photometric calibration of the first 1.5 years of
science imaging from the Pan-STARRS1 survey (PS1), an ongoing optical survey of
the entire sky north of declination -30 degrees in five bands. Building on the
techniques employed by Padmanabhan et al. (2008) in the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS), we use repeat PS1 observations of stars to perform the relative
calibration of PS1 in each of its five bands, solving simultaneously for the
system throughput, the atmospheric transparency, and the large-scale detector
flat field. Both internal consistency tests and comparison against the SDSS
indicate that we achieve relative precision of <10 mmag in g, r, and i_P1, and
~10 mmag in z and y_P1. The spatial structure of the differences with the SDSS
indicates that errors in both the PS1 and SDSS photometric calibration
contribute similarly to the differences. The analysis suggests that both the
PS1 system and the Haleakala site will enable <1% photometry over much of the
sky.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures (arxiv version updated to published version
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