3,127 research outputs found
Deep imaging of Eridanus II and its lone star cluster
We present deep imaging of the most distant dwarf discovered by the Dark
Energy Survey, Eridanus II (Eri II). Our Magellan/Megacam stellar photometry
reaches mag deeper than previous work, and allows us to confirm the
presence of a stellar cluster whose position is consistent with Eri II's
center. This makes Eri II, at , the least luminous galaxy known to
host a (possibly central) cluster. The cluster is partially resolved, and at
it accounts for of Eri II's luminosity. We derive
updated structural parameters for Eri II, which has a half-light radius of
pc and is elongated (), at a measured
distance of kpc. The color-magnitude diagram displays a blue,
extended horizontal branch, as well as a less populated red horizontal branch.
A central concentration of stars brighter than the old main sequence turnoff
hints at a possible intermediate-age ( Gyr) population; alternatively,
these sources could be blue straggler stars. A deep Green Bank Telescope
observation of Eri II reveals no associated atomic gas.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; ApJL accepte
Preliminary Results from the Caltech Core-Collapse Project (CCCP)
We present preliminary results from the Caltech Core-Collapse Project (CCCP),
a large observational program focused on the study of core-collapse SNe.
Uniform, high-quality NIR and optical photometry and multi-epoch optical
spectroscopy have been obtained using the 200'' Hale and robotic 60''
telescopes at Palomar, for a sample of 50 nearby core-collapse SNe. The
combination of both well-sampled optical light curves and multi-epoch
spectroscopy will enable spectroscopically and photometrically based subtype
definitions to be disentangled from each other. Multi-epoch spectroscopy is
crucial to identify transition events that evolve among subtypes with time. The
CCCP SN sample includes every core-collapse SN discovered between July 2004 and
September 2005 that was visible from Palomar, found shortly (< 30 days) after
explosion (based on available pre-explosion photometry), and closer than ~120
Mpc. This complete sample allows, for the first time, a study of core-collapse
SNe as a population, rather than as individual events. Here, we present the
full CCCP SN sample and show exemplary data collected. We analyze available
data for the first ~1/3 of the sample and determine the subtypes of 13 SNe II
based on both light curve shapes and spectroscopy. We discuss the relative SN
II subtype fractions in the context of associating SN subtypes with specific
progenitor stars.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the meeting "The Multicoloured
Landscape of Compact Objects and their Explosive Origins", Cefalu, Italy,
June 2006, to be published by AIP, Eds. L. Burderi et a
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