1,320 research outputs found

    On the radial distribution of stars of different stellar generations in the globular cluster NGC 3201

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    We study the radial distribution of stars of different stellar generations in the globular cluster NGC 3201. From recently published multicolour photometry, a radial dependence of the location of stars on the giant branch was found. We coupled the photometric information to our sample of 100 red giants with Na, O abundances and known classification as first or second-generation stars. We find that giants stars of the second generation in NGC 3201 show a tendency to be more centrally concentrated than stars of the first generation, supporting less robust results from our spectroscopic analysis.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Aluminum abundances of multiple stellar generations in the globular cluster NGC 1851

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    We study the distribution of aluminum abundances among red giants in the peculiar globular cluster NGC 1851. Aluminum abundances were derived from the strong doublet Al I 8772-8773 A measured on intermediate resolution FLAMES spectra of 50 cluster stars acquired under the Gaia-ESO public survey. We coupled these abundances with previously derived abundance of O, Na, Mg to fully characterize the interplay of the NeNa and MgAl cycles of H-burning at high temperature in the early stellar generation in NGC 1851. The stars in our sample show well defined correlations between Al,Na and Si; Al is anticorrelated with O and Mg. The average value of the [Al/Fe] ratio steadily increases going from the first generation stars to the second generation populations with intermediate and extremely modified composition. We confirm on a larger database the results recently obtained by us (Carretta et al. 2011a): the pattern of abundances of proton-capture elements implies a moderate production of Al in NGC 1851. We find evidence of a statistically significant positive correlation between Al and Ba abundances in the more metal-rich component of red giants in NGC 1851.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in pres

    A Stromgren view of the multiple populations in globular clusters

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    We discuss a variety of photometric indices assembled from the uvby Stromgren system. Our aim is to examine the pros and cons of the various indices to find the most suitable one(s) to study the properties of multiple populations in globular clusters (GCs) discovered by spectroscopy. We explore in particular the capabilities of indices like m_1 and c_y at different metallicities. We define a new index delta_4=(u-v)-(b-y) to separate first and second stellar generations in GCs of any metal abundance, since it keeps the sensitivity to multiple stellar populations over all the metallicity range and at the same time minimizes the sensitivity to photometric errors. We detecte clear differences in the red giant branches of the GCs examined, like skewness or bi/multi-modality in color distribution. We connect the photometric information with the spectroscopic results on O, Na abundances we obtained in our survey of GCs. Finally, we compute the effects of different chemical composition on the Stromgren filters and indices using synthetic spectra.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysics. Figures 1,3,5 degraded in resolutio

    Helium in first and second-generation stars in Globular Clusters from spectroscopy of red giants

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    (abridged) Recent spectroscopic and photometric observations show the existence of various generations of stars in GCs, differing in the abundances of products of H-burning at high temperatures (the main final product being He). It is important to study the connections between stars properties and He content. We consider here the about 1400 stars on the Red Giant Branch (RGB) observed with FLAMES@VLT in 19 Galactic GCs, part of out Na-O anticorrelation projet. Stars with different He are expected to have different temperatures (i.e. colours), slightly different [Fe/H], and different luminosity levels of the RGB bump. All these differences are small, but our study has the necessary precision, good statistics, and homogeneity to detect them. We also computed suitable sets of stellar models (BaSTI) for various assumptions about the initial helium content. Differences in observable quantities that can be attributed to variations in He content are generally detectable between stars of the Primordial (P, first-generation) and Extreme (E, second-generation) populations, but not between the Primordial and Intermediate ones (I). The only exception (differences are significant also between P and I populations) is NGC2808, where three populations are clearly separated also on the Main Sequence and the Horizontal Branch. The average enhancement in the He mass fraction Y between P and E stars is about 0.05-0.11, depending on the assumptions. The differences in Y, for NGC2808 alone, are about 0.11-0.14 between P and I stars, and about 0.15-0.19 between P and E stars, again depending on the assumptions. The RGB bump luminosity of first and second-generation stars has different levels; the implied Y difference is more difficult to quantify, but is in agreement with the other determinations.Comment: In press on A&

    Intrinsic iron spread and a new metallicity scale for Globular Clusters

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    We have collected spectra of about 2000 red giant branch (RGB) stars in 19 Galactic globular clusters (GC) using FLAMES@VLT (about 100 star with GIRAFFE and about 10 with UVES, respectively, in each GC). These observations provide an unprecedented, precise, and homogeneous data-set of Fe abundances in GCs. We use it to study the cosmic scatter of iron and find that, as far as Fe is concerned, most GCs can still be considered mono-metallic, since the upper limit to the scatter in iron is less than 0.05 dex, meaning that the degree of homogeneity is better than 12%. The scatter in Fe we find seems to have a dependence on luminosity, possibly due to the well-known inadequacies of stellar atmospheres for upper-RGB stars and/or to intrinsic variability. It also seems to be correlated with cluster properties, like the mass, indicating a larger scatter in more massive GCs which is likely a (small) true intrinsic scatter. The 19 GCs, covering the metallicity range of the bulk of Galactic GCs, define an accurate and updated metallicity scale. We provide transformation equations for a few existing scales. We also provide new values of [Fe/H], on our scale, for all GCs in the Harris' catalogue.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Magnetic field induced non-Fermi liquid to Fermi liquid crossover at the quantum critical point of YbCu5x_{5-x}Aux_{x}

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    The temperature (T) dependence of the muon and 63^{63}Cu nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rates 1/T11/T_1 in YbCu4.4Au0.6 is reported over nearly four decades. It is shown that for T0T\to 0 1/T11/T_1 diverges following the behaviour predicted by the self-consistent renormalization (SCR) theory developed by Moriya for a ferromagnetic quantum critical point. On the other hand, the static uniform susceptibility χs\chi_s is observed to diverge as T2/3T^{-2/3} and 1/T1Tχs21/T_1T\propto \chi_s^2, a behaviour which is not accounted for by SCR theory. The application of a magnetic field HH is observed to induce a crossover to a Fermi liquid behaviour and for T0T\to 0 1/T11/T_1 is found to obey the scaling law 1/T1(H)=1/T1(0)[1+(μBH/kBT)2]11/T_1(H)= 1/T_1(0)[1+(\mu_BH/k_BT)^2]^{-1}.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Detailed abundances of a large sample of giant stars in M 54 and in the Sagittarius nucleus

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    Homogeneous abundances of light elements, alpha and Fe-group elements from high-resolution FLAMES spectra are presented for 76 red giant stars in M54, a massive globular cluster (GC) lying in the nucleus of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. We also derived detailed abundances for 27 red giants belonging to the Sgr nucleus. Our abundances assess the intrinsic metallicity dispersion (~0.19 dex, rms scatter) of M54, with the bulk of stars peaking at [Fe/H]~-1.6 and a long tail extending to higher metallicities, similar to omega Cen. The spread in these probable nuclear star clusters exceeds those of most GCs: these massive clusters are located in a region intermediate between normal GCs and dwarf galaxies. M54 shows the Na-O anticorrelation, typical signature of GCs, which is instead absent in the Sgr nucleus. The light elements (Mg, Al, Si) participating to the high temperature Mg-Al cycle show that the pattern of (anti)correlations produced by proton-capture reactions in H-burning is clearly different between the most metal-rich and most metal-poor components in the two most massive GCs in the Galaxy, confirming early result based on the Na-O anticorrelation. As in omega Cen, stars affected by most extreme processing, i.e. showing the signature of more massive polluters, are those of the metal-rich component. This can be understood if the burst of star formation giving birth to the metal-rich component was delayed by as much as 10-30 Myr with respect to the metal-poor one. The evolution of these massive GCs can be reconciled in the general scenario for the formation of GCs sketched in Carretta et al.(2010a) taking into account that omega Cen could have already incorporated the surrounding nucleus of its progenitor and lost the rest of the hosting galaxy while the two are still observable as distinct components in M54 and the surrounding field.Comment: 22 pages (3 pages of appendix), 25 figures. Tables 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7 are only available in electronic form at the CDS Accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic

    A view from inside iron-based superconductors

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    Muon spin spectroscopy is one of the most powerful tools to investigate the microscopic properties of superconductors. In this manuscript, an overview on some of the main achievements obtained by this technique in the iron-based superconductors (IBS) are presented. It is shown how the muons allow to probe the whole phase diagram of IBS, from the magnetic to the superconducting phase, and their sensitivity to unravel the modifications of the magnetic and the superconducting order parameters, as the phase diagram is spanned either by charge doping, by an external pressure or by introducing magnetic and non-magnetic impurities. Moreover, it is highlighted that the muons are unique probes for the study of the nanoscopic coexistence between magnetism and superconductivity taking place at the crossover between the two ground-states.Comment: 28 pages, 18 figure

    Na-O Anticorrelation and HB. VIII. Proton-capture elements and metallicities in 17 globular clusters from UVES spectra

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    We present homogeneous abundances for Fe and some of the elements involved in the proton-capture reactions (O, Na, Mg, Al, and Si) for 202 red giants in 17 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) from the analysis of high resolution UVES spectra obtained with FLAMES@ESO-VLT2. Our programme clusters span almost the whole range in metallicity of GCs and were selected to sample the widest range of global parameters (HB morphology, masses, concentration, etc). Here we focus on the discussion of the Na-O and Mg-Al anticorrelations and related issues. Our study finds clear Na and O star-to-star abundance variations in all GCs. Variations in Al are present in all but a few GCs. Finally, a spread in abundances of Mg and Si are also present in a few clusters. Mg is slightly less overabundant and Si slightly more overabundant in the most Al-rich stars. The correlation between Si and Al abundances is a signature of production of 28Si leaking from the Mg-Al cycle in a few clusters. The cross sections required for the proper reactions to take over in the cycle point to temperatures in excess of about 65 MK for the favoured site of production. We used a dilution model to infer the total range of Al abundances starting from the Al abundances in the UVES spectra, and the Na abundance distributions found from analysis of the much larger set of stars for which GIRAFFE spectra were available. We found that the maximum amount of additional Al produced by first generation polluters contributing to the composition of the second generation stars in each cluster is closely correlated with the same combination of metallicity and cluster luminosity that reproduced the minimum O abundances found from GIRAFFE spectra. We then suggest that the high temperatures required for the Mg-Al cycle are only reached in the most massive and most metal-poor polluters.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, fig. 3 degraded. Accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic
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