2,097 research outputs found
The magnetic exchange parameters and anisotropy of the quasi-two dimensional antiferromagnet NiPS
Neutron inelastic scattering has been used to measure the magnetic
excitations in powdered NiPS, a quasi-two dimensional antiferromagnet with
spin on a honeycomb lattice. The spectra show clear, dispersive magnons
with a meV gap at the Brillouin zone center. The data were fitted
using a Heisenberg Hamiltonian with a single-ion anisotropy assuming no
magnetic exchange between the honeycomb planes. Magnetic exchange interactions
up to the third intraplanar nearest-neighbour were required. The fits show
robustly that NiPS has an easy axis anisotropy with meV and
that the third nearest-neighbour has a strong antiferromagnetic exchange of
meV. The data can be fitted reasonably well with either
or , however the best quantitative agreement with high-resolution data
indicate that the nearest-neighbour interaction is ferromagnetic with meV and that the second nearest-neighbour exchange is small and
antiferromagnetic with meV. The dispersion has a minimum in the
Brillouin zone corner that is slightly larger than that at the Brillouin zone
center, indicating that the magnetic structure of NiPS is close to being
unstable.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, 33 reference
Evidence for biquadratic exchange in the quasi-two-dimensional antiferromagnet FePS
FePS is a van der Waals compound with a honeycomb lattice that is a good
example of a two-dimensional antiferromagnet with Ising-like anisotropy.
Neutron spectroscopy data from FePS3 were previously analysed using a
straight-forward Heisenberg Hamiltonian with a single-ion anisotropy. The
analysis captured most of the elements of the data, however some significant
discrepancies remained. The discrepancies were most obvious at the Brillouin
zone boundaries. The data are subsequently reanalysed allowing for unequal
exchange between nominally equivalent nearest-neighbours, which resolves the
discrepancies. The source of the unequal exchange is attributed to a
biquadratic exchange term in the Hamiltonian which most probably arises from a
strong magnetolattice coupling. The new parameters show that there are features
consistent with Dirac magnon nodal lines along certain Brillouin zone
boundaries.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. The following article has been accepted by the
Journal of Applied Physics. After it is published, it will be found at
(https://publishing.aip.org/resources/librarians/products/journals/). The
article was submitted as part of a special topic edition
(https://publishing.aip.org/publications/journals/special-topics/jap/2d-quantum-materials-magnetism-and-superconductivity/
Near-IR spectroscopic ages of massive star clusters in M82
Like other starburst galaxies, M82 hosts compact, massive young star clusters
that are interesting both in their own right and as benchmarks for population
synthesis models. Can spectral synthesis models at resolutions around 1000
adequately reproduce the near-IR spectral features and the energy distribution
of these clusters between 0.8 and 2.4 microns? How do the derived cluster
properties compare with previous results from optical studies?
We analyse the spectra of 5 massive clusters in M82, using data acquired with
the spectrograph SpeX on the InfraRed Telescope Facility (NASA/IRTF) and a new
population synthesis tool with a highly improved near-IR extension, based on a
recent collection of empirical and theoretical spectra of red supergiant stars.
We obtain excellent fits across the near-IR with models at quasi-solar
metallicity and a solar neighbourhood extinction law. Spectroscopy breaks a
strong degeneracy between age and extinction in the near-IR colours in the red
supergiant-dominated phase of evolution. The estimated near-IR ages cluster
between 9 and 30 Myr, i.e. the ages at which the molecular bands due to
luminous red supergiants are strongest in the current models. They do not
always agree with optical spectroscopic ages. Adding optical data sometimes
leads to the rejection of the solar neighbourhood extinction law. This is not
surprising considering small-scale structure around the clusters, but it has no
significant effect on the near-IR based spectroscopic ages. [abridged]Comment: 14 pages, 20 figures, uses aa.cl
Integrated J- and H-band spectra of globular clusters in the LMC: implications for stellar population models and galaxy age dating
(Abridged) The rest-frame near-IR spectra of intermediate age (1-2 Gyr)
stellar populations are dominated by carbon based absorption features offering
a wealth of information. Yet, spectral libraries that include the near-IR
wavelength range do not sample a sufficiently broad range of ages and
metallicities to allow for accurate calibration of stellar population models
and thus the interpretation of the observations. In this paper we investigate
the integrated J- and H-band spectra of six intermediate age (1-3 Gyr) and old
(>10 Gyr) globular clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud, using observations
obtained with the SINFONI IFU at the VLT. H-band C2 and K-band 12CO(2-0)
feature strengths are compared to the models of Maraston (2005). C2 is
reasonably well reproduced by the models at all ages, while 12CO(2-0) shows
good agreement for older (age>2 Gyr) populations, but the younger (1.3 Gyr)
globular clusters do not follow the models. We argue that this is due to the
fact that the empirical calibration of the models relies on only a few Milky
Way carbon star spectra, which show different 12CO(2-0) index strengths than
the LMC stars. The C2 absorption feature strength correlates strongly with age.
It is present essentially only in populations that have 1-2 Gyr old stars,
while its value is consistent with zero for older populations. The distinct
spectral energy distribution observed for the intermediate age globular
clusters in the J- and H-bands agrees well with the model predictions of
Maraston for the contribution from the thermally pulsing asymptotic giant
branch phase (TP-AGB). We show that the H-band C2 absorption feature and the
J-, H-band spectral shape can be used as an age indicator for intermediate age
stellar populations in integrated spectra of star clusters and galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, abstract abridged, accepted for publication in
A&
The X-shooter Spectral Library (XSL): I. DR1. Near-ultraviolet through optical spectra from the first year of the survey
We present the first release of XSL, the X-Shooter Spectral Library. This
release contains 237 stars spanning the wavelengths 3000--10200 \AA\ observed
at a resolving power . The spectra
were obtained at ESO's 8-m Very Large Telescope (VLT). The sample contains O --
M, long-period variable (LPV), C and S stars. The spectra are flux-calibrated
and telluric-corrected. We describe a new technique for the telluric
correction. The wavelength coverage, spectral resolution and spectral type of
this library make it well suited to stellar population synthesis of galaxies
and clusters, kinematical investigation of stellar systems and studying the
physics of cool stars.Comment: 41 pages, 38 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A.
Webpage: http://xsl.u-strasbg.fr
The M/L ratio of massive young clusters
We point out a strong time-evolution of the mass-to-light conversion factor
\eta commonly used to estimate masses of dense star clusters from observed
cluster radii and stellar velocity dispersions. We use a gas-dynamical model
coupled with the Cambridge stellar evolution tracks to compute line-of-sight
velocity dispersions and half-light radii weighted by the luminosity. Stars at
birth are assumed to follow the Salpeter mass function in the range [0.15--17
M_\sun]. We find that , and hence the estimated cluster mass, increases
by factors as large as 3 over time-scales of 20 million years. Increasing the
upper mass limit to 50 M_\sun leads to a sharp rise of similar amplitude but
in as little as 10 million years.
Fitting truncated isothermal (Michie-King) models to the projected light
profile leads to over-estimates of the concentration par ameter c of compared to the same functional fit applied to the proj ected
mass density.Comment: Draft version of an ApJ lette
Near-IR spectra of ISOGAL sources in the Inner Galactic Bulge
In this work we present near-IR spectra (HK-band) of a sample of 107 sources
with mid-IR excesses at 7 and 15 m detected during the ISOGAL survey.
Making use of the DENIS interstellar extinction map from Schultheis et al.
(1999) we derive luminosities and find that the vs.~
and diagrams are powerful tools for identifying
supergiants, AGB stars, giants and young stellar objects. The majority of our
sample are AGB stars (~ 80%) while we find four good supergiant candidates,
nine young stellar objects and 12 RGB candidates. We have used the most recent
relation by Jeong et al. (2002) based on recent theoretical
modeling of dust formation of AGB stars to determine mass-loss rates. However,
the uncertainties in the mass-loss rates are rather large. The mass-loss rates
of the supergiants are comparable with those in the solar neighbourhood while
the long-period Variables cover a mass-loss range from . The red giant candidateslie at the lower end of the
mass-loss rate range between . We used the
equivalent width of the CO bandhead at 2.3 , the NaI doublet and the
CaI triplet to estimate metallicities using the relation by Ram\'{\i}rez et al.
(\cite{Ramirez2000}). The metallicity distribution of the ISOGAL objects shows
a mean [Fe/H] -0.25 dex with a dispersion of which is
in agreement with the values of Ram\'{i}rez et al. (\cite{Ramirez2000}) for
Galactic Bulge fields between and . A
comparison with the solar neighbourhood sample of Lan\c{c}on & Wood (LW) shows
that our sample is ~ 0.5 dex more metal-rich on average.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, 2 appendix with IR spectra. accepted for A&
Near-IR Spectra of Red Supergiants and Giants. I- Models with Solar and with Mixing-Induced Surface Abundance Ratios
We provide a grid of PHOENIX spectra of red giant and supergiant stars, that
extend through optical and near-IR wavelengths. For the first time, models are
also provided with modified surface abundances of C, N and O, as a step towards
accounting for the changes known to occur due to convective dredge-up (and to
be enhanced in the case of rotation). The aims are (i) to assess how well
current models reproduce observed spectra, (ii) to quantify the effects of the
abundance changes on the spectra, and (iii) to determine how these changes
affect estimates of fundamental stellar parameters.
Observed giant star spectra can be fitted very well at solar metallicity down
to about 3400K. Modified surface abundances are preferred in only a minority of
cases for luminosity class II, possibly indicating mixing in excess of standard
first dredge-up.
Supergiant stars show a larger variety of near-IR spectra, and good fits are
currently obtained for about one third of the observations only. Modified
surface abundances help reproducing strong CN bands, but do not suffice to
resolve all the difficulties. The effect of the abundance changes on the
estimated Teff depends on the wavelength range of observation and can amount
several 100K. Reasons for the remaining discrepancies are discussed.Comment: To be published in A&A. 19 p., 35 postscript figures, uses aa.cls.
Selected model spectra available through CD
First spectroscopic evidence for carbon stars outside the Local Group: properties of a massive star cluster in NGC 7252
We present near-IR spectroscopy of the massive intermediate age star cluster
W3 in the merger remnant galaxy NGC 7252, obtained with the NTT telescope. This
cluster has an age when the integrated near-IR properties of a stellar
population are dominated by the cool and luminous AGB stars. We compare the
data with instantaneous curst model predictions from new evolutionary synthesis
models that include: (1) the computation of the evolution through the TP-AGB
for low- and intermediate-massive stars, with the initial mass and metallicity
dependent formation of carbon stars; (2) spectroscopic data from a new stellar
library in which differences betwenn static giants, vriable O-rich TPAGB stars
and carbon stars are accounted for. The comparison of the data to the models
clearly shows that carbon stars are present: for the first time, carbon star
spectral features are thus detected directly outside the Local Group (abriged)Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 14 page
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