4,423 research outputs found
Clustering of Local Group distances: publication bias or correlated measurements? I. The Large Magellanic Cloud
The distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) represents a key local rung
of the extragalactic distance ladder. Yet, the galaxy's distance modulus has
long been an issue of contention, in particular in view of claims that most
newly determined distance moduli cluster tightly - and with a small spread -
around the "canonical" distance modulus, (m-M)_0 = 18.50 mag. We compiled 233
separate LMC distance determinations published between 1990 and 2013. Our
analysis of the individual distance moduli, as well as of their two-year means
and standard deviations resulting from this largest data set of LMC distance
moduli available to date, focuses specifically on Cepheid and RR Lyrae
variable-star tracer populations, as well as on distance estimates based on
features in the observational Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. We conclude that
strong publication bias is unlikely to have been the main driver of the
majority of published LMC distance moduli. However, for a given distance
tracer, the body of publications leading to the tightly clustered distances is
based on highly non-independent tracer samples and analysis methods, hence
leading to significant correlations among the LMC distances reported in
subsequent articles. Based on a careful, weighted combination, in a statistical
sense, of the main stellar population tracers, we recommend that a slightly
adjusted canonical distance modulus of (m-M)_0 = 18.49 +- 0.09 mag be used for
all practical purposes that require a general distance scale without the need
for accuracies of better than a few percent.Comment: 35 pages (AASTeX preprint format), 5 postscript figures; AJ, in
press. For full database of LMC distance moduli, see
http://astro-expat.info/Data/pubbias.htm
Direct Detection of the Close Companion of Polaris with the Hubble Space Telescope
Polaris, the nearest and brightest classical Cepheid, is a single-lined
spectroscopic binary with an orbital period of 30 years. Using the High
Resolution Channel of the Advanced Camera for Surveys onboard the Hubble Space
Telescope (HST) at a wavelength of ~2255\AA, we have directly detected the
faint companion at a separation of 0\farcs17. A second HST observation 1.04 yr
later confirms orbital motion in a retrograde direction. By combining our two
measures with the spectroscopic orbit of Kamper and an analysis of the
Hipparcos and FK5 proper motions by Wielen et al., we find a mass for Polaris
Aa of 4.5^{+2.2}_{-1.4} M_\odot--the first purely dynamical mass determined for
any Cepheid. For the faint companion Polaris Ab we find a dynamical mass of
1.26^{+0.14}_{-0.07} M_\odot, consistent with an inferred spectral type of F6 V
and with the flux difference of 5.4 mag observed at 2255\AA. The magnitude
difference at the V band is estimated to be 7.2 mag. Continued HST observations
will significantly reduce the mass errors, which are presently still too large
to provide critical constraints on the roles of convective overshoot, mass
loss, rotation, and opacities in the evolution of intermediate-mass stars.
Our astrometry, combined with two centuries of archival measurements, also
confirms that the well-known, more distant (18") visual companion, Polaris B,
has a nearly common proper motion with that of the Aa,Ab pair. This is
consistent with orbital motion in a long-period bound system. The ultraviolet
brightness of Polaris B is in accordance with its known F3 V spectral type if
it has the same distance as Polaris Aa,Ab.Comment: 31 pages, 12 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
Blue Straggler masses from pulsation properties. I. The case of NGC6541
We used high-spatial resolution images acquired with the WFC3 on board HST to
probe the population of variable blue straggler stars in the central region of
the poorly studied Galactic globular cluster NGC 6541. The time sampling of the
acquired multi wavelength (F390W, F555W and F814W) data allowed us to discover
three WUma stars and nine SX Phoenicis. Periods, mean magnitudes and pulsation
modes have been derived for the nine SX Phoenicis and their masses have been
estimated by using pulsation equations obtained from linear non adiabatic
models. We found masses in the range 1.0-1.1Mo, with an average value of
1.06+-0.09 Mo (sigma = 0.04), significantly in excess of the cluster Main
Sequence Turn Off mass (~ 0.75Mo). A mild trend between mass and luminosity
seems also to be present. The computed pulsation masses turn out to be in very
good agreement with the predictions of evolutionary tracks for single stars,
indicating values in the range ~ 1.0-1.2 Mo for most of the BSS population, in
agreement with what discussed in a number of previous studies.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, ApJ, accepte
Smoking behaviour and individual well-being: a fresh look at the effects of the 2005 public smoking ban in Italy
This paper investigates the impact of the public smoking ban which came into effect in Italy in January 2005 on individual smoking behaviour. Current empirical evidence supports the existence of a negative effect of the Italian ban on smoking prevalence and consumption in the general population. Our analysis shows that the apparent success of the ban is due to the fact that existing results do not take into account seasonal differences in smoking behaviour. Using quarterly data from the 1999/2000 and 2004/2005 Italian Health Surveys and adopting a difference-in-difference approach that nets out monthly variation in smoking rates, we show that the Italian smoking ban had no impact on smoking behaviour for the population as a whole but only on some subgroups. This result notwithstanding, we find that the smoking ban increased the overall well-being of non-smokers
On the central helium-burning variable stars of the LeoI dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We present a study of short period, central helium-burning variable stars in
the Local Group dwarf spheroidal galaxy LeoI, including 106 RR Lyrae stars and
51 Cepheids. So far, this is the largest sample of Cepheids and the largest
Cepheids to RR Lyrae ratio found in such a kind of galaxy. The comparison with
other Local Group dwarf spheroidals, Carina and Fornax, shows that the period
distribution of RR Lyrae stars is quite similar, suggesting similar properties
of the parent populations, whereas the Cepheid period distribution in LeoI
peaks at longer periods (P \sim 1.26d instead of ~0.5d) and spans over a
broader range, from 0.5 to 1.78d.
Evolutionary and pulsation predictions indicate, assuming a mean metallicity
peaked within -1.5<= [Fe/H]<=-1.3, that the current sample of LeoI Cepheids
traces a unique mix of Anomalous Cepheids (blue extent of the red--clump,
partially electron degenerate central helium-burning stars) and short-period
classical Cepheids (blue-loop, quiescent central helium-burning stars). Current
evolutionary prescriptions also indicate that the transition mass between the
two different groups of stars is MHeF \sim 2.1 Mo, and it is constant for stars
metal-poorer than [Fe/H]\sim-0.7. Finally, we briefly outline the different
implications of the current findings on the star formation history of LeoI.Comment: 5 Pages, 4 Figures, ApJ letter, accepte
Blue straggler masses from pulsation properties. II. Topology of the Instability Strip
We present a new set of nonlinear, convective radial pulsation models for
main sequence stars computed assuming three metallicities: Z=0.0001, 0.001 and
0.008. These chemical compositions bracket the metallicity of stellar systems
hosting SX Phoenicis stars (SXPs or pulsating Blue Stragglers), namely Galactic
globular clusters and nearby dwarf spheroidals. Stellar masses and luminosities
of the pulsation models are based on alpha--enhanced evolutionary tracks from
the BASTI website. We are able to define the topology of the instability strip
(IS), and in turn the pulsation relations for the first four pulsation modes.
We found that third overtones approach a stable nonlinear limit cycle.
Predicted and empirical IS agree quite well in the case of 49 SXPs belonging to
omega Cen. We used theoretical Period-Luminosity relations in B,V bands to
identify their pulsation mode. We assumed Z=0.001 and Z=0.008 as mean
metallicities of SXPs in omega Cen. We found respectively 13-15 fundamental,
22-6 first and 9-4 second overtone modes. Five are unstable in the third
overtone mode only for Z=0.001. Using the above mode identification and
applying the proper mass-dependent Period-Luminosity relations we found masses
ranging from ~1.0 to 1.2 Mo (=1.12, sigma=0.04 Mo) and from ~1.2 to 1.5 Mo
(=1.33, sigma=0.03 Mo) for Z=0.001 and 0.008 respectively. Our investigation
supports the use of evolutionary tracks to estimate of SXP masses. We will
extend our analysis to higher Helium content that may have an impact in our
understanding of the BSS formation scenario.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables, ApJ accepte
Cepheid Mass-loss and the Pulsation -- Evolutionary Mass Discrepancy
I investigate the discrepancy between the evolution and pulsation masses for
Cepheid variables. A number of recent works have proposed that non-canonical
mass-loss can account for the mass discrepancy. This mass-loss would be such
that a 5Mo star loses approximately 20% of its mass by arriving at the Cepheid
instability strip; a 14Mo star, none. Such findings would pose a serious
challenge to our understanding of mass-loss. I revisit these results in light
of the Padova stellar evolutionary models and find evolutionary masses are
()% greater than pulsation masses for Cepheids between 5<M/Mo<14. I
find that mild internal mixing in the main-sequence progenitor of the Cepheid
are able to account for this mass discrepancy.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, ApJ accepte
Flourishing at work is all about relationships
Work as strictly business is an outdated idea: office friendships serve a growing number of functions in our lives, write Amy E. Colbert, Joyce E. Bono and Radostina (Ina) K. Purvanov
Variable Stars in Local Group Galaxies. I: Tracing the Early Chemical Enrichment and Radial Gradients in the Sculptor dSph with RR Lyrae Stars
We identified and characterized the largest (536) RR Lyrae (RRL) sample in a
Milky Way dSph satellite (Sculptor) based on optical photometry data collected
over 24 years.
The RRLs display a spread in V-magnitude (0.35 mag) which appears
larger than photometric errors and the horizontal branch (HB) luminosity
evolution of a mono-metallic population. Using several calibrations of two
different reddening free and metal independent Period-Wesenheit relations we
provide a new distance estimate =19.62 mag (=0.04 mag) that
agrees well with literature estimates. We constrained the metallicity
distribution of the old population, using the Period-Luminosity relation,
and we found that it ranges from -2.3 to -1.5 dex. The current estimate is
narrower than suggested by low and intermediate spectroscopy of RGBs
([Fe/H] 1.5).
We also investigated the HB morphology as a function of the galactocentric
distance. The HB in the innermost regions is dominated by red HB stars and by
RRLs, consistent with a more metal-rich population, while in the outermost
regions it is dominated by blue HB stars and RRLs typical of a metal-poor
population. Our results suggest that fast chemical evolution occurred in
Sculptor, and that the radial gradients were in place at an early epoch.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS accepte
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