1,989 research outputs found
On the observational properties of He-burning stars: some clues on the tilt of the HB in metal rich clusters
We investigate the predicted Color-Magnitude distribution of metal-rich
Horizontal Branch (HB) stars, discussing selected theoretical models computed
under various assumptions about the star metallicity and the efficiency of
super-adiabatic convection. We find that canonical Zero Age Horizontal Branches
with metallicity larger or of the order of Z=0.002 should be all affected by a
tilt, by an amount which increases when the metallicity is increased and/or the
mixing length is decreased, reaching a tilt of 0.2 mag in the
case of solar metallicity when a mixing length value =1.6 is assumed
( is the magnitude difference between the top of the blue HB and the
fainter magnitude reached by the red HB). Uncertainties in the luminosity of
the red HB due to uncertainty in the mixing length value are discussed. We
finally discuss the much larger tilt observed in the clusters NGC 6441 and NGC
6388, reporting additional evidence against suggested non-canonical
evolutionary scenarios. Numerical experiments show that differential reddening
could produce such sloped HBs. Further, HST-PC imaging of NGC 6441 gives clear
indications about the occurrence of differential reddening across the cluster.
However, the same imaging shows that the observed slope of the red HB {\em is
not} an artifact of differential reddening. We finally show that sloping red
HBs in metal rich clusters are a common occurrence not necessarily correlated
with the appearance of extended blue HB.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, Accepted by Ap
The blue sky of GJ3470b: the atmosphere of a low-mass planet unveiled by ground-based photometry
GJ3470b is a rare example of a "hot Uranus" transiting exoplanet orbiting a
nearby M1.5 dwarf. It is of crucial interest for atmospheric studies because it
is one of the most inflated low-mass planets known, bridging the boundary
between "super-Earths" and Neptunian planets. We present two new ground-based
light curves of GJ3470b gathered by the LBC camera at the Large Binocular
Telescope. Simultaneous photometry in the ultraviolet (lambda_c = 357.5 nm) and
optical infrared (lambda_c = 963.5 nm) allowed us to detect a significant
change of the effective radius of GJ3470b as a function of wavelength. This can
be interpreted as a signature of scattering processes occurring in the
planetary atmosphere, which should be cloud-free and with a low mean molecular
weight. The unprecedented accuracy of our measurements demonstrates that the
photometric detection of Earth-sized planets around M dwarfs is achievable
using 8-10m size ground-based telescopes. We provide updated planetary
parameters, and a greatly improved orbital ephemeris for any forthcoming study
of this planet.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in A&
Deep HST-WFPC2 photometry of NGC 288. II. The Main Sequence Luminosity Function
The Main Sequence Luminosity Function (LF) of the Galactic globular cluster
NGC 288 has been obtained using deep WFPC2 photometry. We have employed a new
method to correct for completeness and fully account for bin-to-bin migration
due to blending and/or observational scatter. The effect of the presence of
binary systems in the final LF is quantified and is found to be negligible.
There is a strong indication of the mass segregation of unevolved single stars
and clear signs of a depletion of low mass stars in NGC 288 with respect to
other clusters. The results are in good agreement with the prediction of
theoretical models of the dynamical evolution of NGC 288 that take into account
the extreme orbital properties of this cluster.Comment: 16 pages, 6 .ps figures. Low resolution version of fig. 1; full
resolution figure soon available at http://www.bo.astro.it/bap/BAPhome.html
l. Latex. emulateapj5.sty macro included. Accepted for publication by The
Astronomical Journa
Absolute proper motion of the Galactic open cluster M67
We derived the absolute proper motion (PM) of the old, solar-metallicity
Galactic open cluster M67 using observations collected with CFHT (1997) and
with LBT (2007). About 50 galaxies with relatively sharp nuclei allow us to
determine the absolute PM of the cluster. We find (mu_alpha
cos(delta),mu_delta)_J2000.0 = (-9.6+/-1.1,-3.7+/-0.8) mas/yr. By adopting a
line-of-sight velocity of 33.8+/-0.2 km/s, and assuming a distance of 815+/-50
pc, we explore the influence of the Galactic potential, with and without the
bar and/or spiral arms, on the galactic orbit of the cluster.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, and 3 tables. Published in Astronomy and
Astrophysics, Volume 513, id.A51
A real CKM matrix?
The hypothesis of a real Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix has been considered
and found to be disfavoured by present measurements even when neglecting
results from CP violation in neutral Kaon decay. This result contradicts
statements reported in hep-ph/9810333.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
Radial extent of the SGB in NGC 1851
Recent HST-ACS observations revealed the presence of a double subgiant branch
(SGB) in the core of the Galactic globular cluster NGC 1851. This peculiarity
was tentatively explained by the presence of a second population with either an
age difference of about 1 Gyr, or a higher C+N+O abundance, probably due to
pollution by the first generation of stars.
In the present Letter, we analyze VLT-FORS V,I images, covering 12.7x12.7
arcmin, in the southwest quadrant of the cluster, allowing us to probe the
extent of the double SGB from ~1.4 to ~13 arcmin from the cluster center. Our
study reveals, for the first time, that the "peculiar" population is the one
associated to the fainter SGB. Indeed, while the percentage of stars in this
sequence is about 45% in the cluster core (as previously found on the basis of
HST-ACS data), we find that it drops sharply, to a level consistent with zero
in our data, at ~2.4 arcmin from the cluster center, where the brighter SGB, in
our sample, still contains ~100 stars. Implications for the proposed scenarios
are discussed.Comment: Revised text, 1 new figure. No major chang
Peculiar Multimodality on the Horizontal Branch of the Globular Cluster NGC 2808
We present distributions of colors of stars along the horizontal branch of
the globular cluster NGC 2808, from Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 imaging in B,
V, and an ultraviolet filter (F218W). This cluster's HB is already known to be
strongly bimodal, with approximately equal-sized HB populations widely
separated in the color-magnitude diagram. Our images reveal a long blue tail
with two gaps, for a total of four nearly distinct HB groups. These gaps are
very narrow, corresponding to envelope-mass differences of only \sim 0.01 Msun.
This remarkable multimodality may be a signature of mass-loss processes, subtle
composition variations, or dynamical effects; we briefly summarize the
possibilities. The existence of narrow gaps between distinct clumps on the HB
presents a challenge for models that attempt to explain HB bimodality or other
peculiar HB structures.Comment: LaTeX, including compressed figures. To appear in ApJL. Larger (851k)
PostScript version, including high-quality figures, available from
http://astro.berkeley.edu/~csosin/pub
- âŠ