27 research outputs found

    Red Giants in the Halo of the S0 Galaxy NGC 3115: A Distance and a Bimodal Metallicity Distribution

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    Using the Hubble Space Telescope, we resolve the red giant branch in the halo of the S0 galaxy NGC 3115. We measure magnitudes and (V−I)(V-I) colours for stars down to 1.5 magnitudes below the tip of the red giant branch. From the brightest stars we estimate a distance modulus (m−M)0=30.21±0.30(m-M)_0=30.21 \pm 0.30, corresponding to a distance of 11.0±1.511.0 \pm 1.5 Mpc. This is in excellent agreement with the value (m−M)0=30.17±0.13(m-M)_0=30.17 \pm 0.13 determined from the planetary nebula luminosity function. Our results rule out the shorter distance modulus (m−M)0=29.65(m-M)_0=29.65 determined from surface brightness fluctuations. A histogram of (V−I)(V-I) colours shows a clear bimodality, indicating the presence of two distinct halo populations of roughly equal size. One has [Fe/H]∌−0.7\sim -0.7 and one has [Fe/H]∌−1.3\sim -1.3. This is the most distant galaxy in which a Population II halo has been resolved, and it is the first time a colour bimodality has been observed among the halo stars of any early-type galaxy.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. MNRAS, in pres

    HST Star Counts at High Galactic Latitudes

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    We use star counts from 13 deep HST fields imaged with the {\it Wide Field Camera - 2} in order to constrain the amount of dark matter in the Galaxy that can be in the form of low-mass main sequence stars or white-dwarfs. Based on the number of red stars found in our fields, we exclude the possibility that more than 25\% of the massive dark halo is made up of M dwarfs or subdwarfs; fairly massive (M∌0.2M⊙M \sim 0.2 M_\odot) and yet extremely faint (MIM_I \gtsima 14.514.5) stellar candidates would have to be invoked in order to make the observed number of stars compatible with that predicted by a stellar dark halo. White dwarfs must also be intrinsically very faint (MIM_I \gtsima 1414) in order to be consistent with the observed number of faint stars in the HST fields. We also rule out an increasing or flat stellar luminosity function beyond MV∌13M_V \sim 13. The inferred slope of the disk luminosity function is intermediary between local, volume-limited surveys and ground-based photometric ones. Finally, the magnitude counts are well fitted by existing models for the structure of the Galaxy, with only small changes in the fiducial values of the model parameters. The colour distribution, however, is not well reproduced by the models. It is unclear at present if this reflects inadequacies of the available models or uncertainties in the colour-magnitude diagrams for low metallicity stars and in the photometric calibration.Comment: 18 pages plus 6 figure

    HST Observations of the Field Star Population in the Large Magellanic Cloud

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    We present VV and II photometry, obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope, for ∌15,800\sim 15,800 stars in a field in the inner disk of the Large Magellanic Cloud. We confirm previous results indicating that an intense star formation event, probably corresponding to the formation of the LMC disk, occurred a few times 10910^9 years ago. We find a small but real difference between our field and one further out in the disk observed by Gallagher et al (1996): either star formation in the inner disk commenced slightly earlier, or the stars are slightly more metal rich. We also find evidence for a later burst, around 1 Gyr ago, which may correspond to the formation of the LMC bar. About 5% of the stars in our field are substantially older than either burst, and are probably members of an old disk or halo population with age ∌12\sim 12 Gyr.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures: only 3 available ellectronically - complete copies by request from [email protected]

    HST Imaging of the Globular Clusters in the Fornax Cluster: NGC 1399 and NGC 1404

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    The Fornax cluster galaxies NGC 1399 and NGC 1404 are ideal for studying the effects of a cluster environment on globular cluster systems. Here we present new optical imaging of these two galaxies from both the Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 and the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory's 1.5m telescope. The combination of both data sets provides unique insight on the spatial and colour distribution of globular clusters. From B-I colours, we find that both galaxies have a broad globular cluster metallicity distribution that is inconsistent with a single population. Two Gaussians provide a reasonable representation of the metallicity distribution in each galaxy. The metal-rich subpopulation is more centrally concentrated than the metal-poor one. We show that the radial metallicity gradient can be explained by the changing relative mix of the two globular cluster subpopulations. We derive globular cluster surface density profiles, and find that they are flatter (i.e. more extended) than the underlying starlight. The total number of globular clusters and specific frequency are calculated to be N = 5700 +/- 500, S_N = 11.5 +/- 1.0 for NGC 1399 and N = 725 +/- 145, S_N = 2.0 +/- 0.5 for NGC 1404. Our results are compared to the expectations of globular cluster formation scenarios.Comment: 21 pages, Latex, 13 figures, submitted to MNRA

    Two serendipitous low-mass LMC clusters discovered with HST

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    We present V and I photometry of two open clusters in the LMC down to V ~ 26. The clusters were imaged with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera - 2 on board of the Hubble Space Telescope, as part of the Medium Deep Survey Key-Project. Both are low luminosity (Mv ~ -3.5), low mass systems (M ~ 10^3 Msolar). The chance discovery of these two clusters in two parallel WFPC2 fields suggests a significant incompleteness in the LMC cluster census near the bar. One of the clusters is roughly elliptical and compact, with a steep light profile, a central surface brightness Mu_v(0) 20.2 mag/arcsec2, half-light radius Rhl ~ 0.9 pc (total visual major diameter D ~ 3 pc) and an estimated mass M ~ 1500 Msolar. From the colour-magnitude diagram and isochrone fits we estimate its age as t ~ 2-5 10^8 years. Its mass function has a fitted slope of Gamma = \Delta log \phi (M) / \Delta log M = -1.8 +/- 0.7 in the range probed (0.9 < M/Msolar < 4.5). The other cluster is more irregular and sparser, having shallower density and surface brightness profiles. We obtain Gamma = -1.2 +/- 0.4, and estimate its mass as M ~ 400 Msolar. A derived upper limit for its age is t < 5 10^8 years. Both clusters have mass functions with slopes similar to that of R136, a massive LMC cluster, for which HST results indicate Gamma ~ -1.2. They also seem to be relaxed in their cores and well contained in their tidal radii.Comment: 16 pages plus 9 figures (2 large figs not included

    Globular Cluster Abundances from High-Resolution Integrated Light Spectra, I: 47 Tuc

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    We describe the detailed chemical abundance analysis of a high-resolution (R~35,000), integrated-light (IL), spectrum of the core of the Galactic globular cluster 47 Tuc, obtained using the du Pont echelle at Las Campanas. We develop an abundance analysis strategy that can be applied to spatial unresolved extra- galactic clusters. We have computed abundances for Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Y, Zr, Ba, La, Nd and Eu. For an analysis with the known color-magnitude diagram (cmd) for 47 Tuc we obtain a mean [Fe/H] value of -0.75 +/-0.026+/-0.045 dex (random and systematic error), in good agreement with the mean of 5 recent high resolution abundance studies, at -0.70 dex. Typical random errors on our mean [X/Fe] ratios are 0.07-0.10 dex, similar to studies of individual stars in 47 Tuc, although Na and Al appear enhanced, perhaps due to proton burning in the most luminous cluster stars. Our IL abundance analysis with an unknown cmd employed theoretical Teramo isochrones; however, we apply zero-point abundance corrections to account for the factor of 3 underprediction of stars at the AGB bump luminosity. While line diagnostics alone provide only mild constraints on the cluster age (ruling-out ages younger than ~2 Gyr), when theoretical IL B-V colors are combined with metallicity derived from the Fe I lines, the age is constrained to 10--15 Gyr and we obtain [Fe/H]=-0.70 +/-0.021 +/-0.052 dex. We find that Fe I line diagnostics may also be used to constrain the horizontal branch morphology of an unresolved cluster. Lastly, our spectrum synthesis of 5.4 million TiO lines indicates that the 7300-7600A TiO window should be useful for estimating the effect of M giants on the IL abundances, and important for clusters more metal-rich than 47 Tuc.Comment: 40 pages text & references, 4 tables, 19 figures (72 pages total). Changes include addition of B-V color to help constrain GC age. To appear in Ap

    Discovery of a luminous white dwarf in a young star cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud

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    We have identified a candidate 1-2 x 10^5 year old luminous white dwarf in NGC 1818, a young star cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud. This discovery strongly constrains the boundary mass M_c at which stars stop forming neutron stars and start forming white dwarfs, to M_c > 7.6 Msun.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, greyscale image available by ftp from [email protected]. ApJLetters, accepted 17 March 199

    The Metal-rich Globular Cluster NGC6553: Observations with WFPC2, STIS, and NICMOS

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    We present a HST study of the metal-rich globular cluster NGC6553 using WFPC2, NICMOS and STIS. Our primary motivation is to calibrate the STIS broad-band LP magnitude against V555V_{555} and I814I_{814} magnitudes for stars of known metallicity and absolute (visual) magnitude, for application to our study of LMC globular clusters. NGC6553 has been shown in earlier studies to have a very unusual colour-magnitude diagram, so we also use our data to investigate the reddening, distance, luminosity function and structure of this cluster. We deduce a higher metallicity and smaller distance modulus than did some previous studies, but emphasise that very large patchy extinction on small angular scales prohibits accurate determination of the parameters of this cluster. The horizontal branch of NGC6553 in (V,V−IV,V-I) is tilted at an angle close to that of the reddening vector. We show that extinction does not, however, explain the tilt, which is presumably a metallicity effect. The colour-magnitude diagram shows an apparent second turnoff some 1.5 magnitudes fainter than that of the cluster. We show that this is most likely the background Galactic bulge: however, in that case, the colour-magnitude diagram of NGC6553 is not a good match to that of the field bulge population. The cluster is probably more metal-rich than is the mean field bulge star.Comment: 29 pages (Latex), 13 figs (PS, in document), 10 figs (JPEG format, outside document, degraded from original to save download time), accepted for pub. in A

    The re-discovery of contemplation through science : with Tom McLeish, “The Re-Discovery of Contemplation through Science: Boyle Lecture 2021”; Rowan Williams, “The Re-Discovery of Contemplation through Science: A Response to Tom McLeish”; Fraser Watts, “Discussion of the Boyle Lecture 2021”; and Tom McLeish, “Response to Boyle Lecture 2021 Panel and Participant Discussion.”

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    Some of the early-modern changes in the social framing of science, while often believed to be essential, are shown to be contingent. They contribute to the flawed public narrative around science today, and especially to the misconceptions around science and religion. Four are examined in detail, each of which contributes to the demise of the contemplative stance that science both requires and offers. They are: (1) a turn from an immersed subject to the pretense of a pure objectivity, (2) a turn from imagination as a legitimate pathway to knowledge, (3) a turn from shared and participative science to a restricted professionalism, and (4) an overprosaic reading of the metaphor of the “Book of Nature.” All four, but especially the imperative to consider reading nature as poetry, and a deeper examination of the entanglements between poetry and theoretical science, draw unavoidably on theological ideas, and contribute to a developing “theology of science.”

    The Globular Clusters in M87: A Bimodal Colour Distribution 1

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    Based on observations obtained as part of the Medium Deep Survey. We present V and I photometry for ∌ 150 globular clusters with 20 &lt; V &lt; 27 ∌ 2.5 arcmin from the centre of M87, the cD galaxy in the Virgo cluster. The data were acquired with the Hubble Space Telescope which, with effective resolution 0.1 arcsec, allows us for the first time to distinguish between globular clusters and most background galaxies on the basis of morphology, and to obtain accurate photometry even at faint magnitudes. The (V − I) distribution of the clusters is clearly bimodal, implying a corresponding bimodality in the metallicity distribution, with peaks at [Fe/H] ≈ −1.5 and −0.5. We also find that the brightest clusters are predominantly metal poor, while the fainter clusters are divided roughly eaually between metal poor and metal rich. Our sample is essentially complete to V ≈ 25, a full magnitude past the expected peak of a “universal” luminosity function, and the observed luminosity function is well represented by the standard gaussian distribution with &lt; MV&gt; = −7.2 and σ = 1.4
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