5,199 research outputs found
FLAMES and XSHOOTER spectroscopy along the two BSS sequences of M30
We present spectroscopic observations acquired with FLAMES and XSHOOTER at
the Very Large Telescope for a sample of 15 Blue Straggler Stars (BSSs) in the
globular cluster (GC) M30. The targets have been selected to sample the two BSS
sequences discovered, with 7 BSSs along the blue sequence and 8 along the red
one. No difference in the kinematical properties of the two groups of BSSs has
been found. In particular, almost all the observed BSSs have projected
rotational velocity lower than ~30 km/s, with only one (blue) fast rotating BSS
(>90 km/s), identified as a W UMa binary. This rotational velocity distribution
is similar to those obtained in 47 Tucanae and NGC 6397, while M4 remains the
only GC studied so far harboring a large fraction of fast rotating BSSs. All
stars hotter than ~7800 K (regardless of the parent BSS sequence) show iron
abundances larger than those measured from normal cluster stars, with a
clearcut trend with the effective temperature. This behaviour suggests that
particle trasport mechanisms driven by radiative levitation occur in the
photosphere of these stars, as already observed for the BSSs in NGC 6397.
Finally, 4 BSSs belonging to the red sequence (not affected by radiative
levitation) show a strong depletion of [O/Fe], with respect to the abundance
measured in Red Giant Branch and Horizontal Branch stars. This O-depletion is
compatible with the chemical signature expected in BSSs formed by mass transfer
processes in binary systems, in agreement with the mechanism proposed for the
formation of BSSs in the red sequence.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Horizontal-Branch Models and the Second-Parameter Effect. IV. The Case of M3 and Palomar 3
We present a detailed analysis of the "second-parameter pair" of globular
clusters M3 (NGC 5272) and Palomar 3. Our main results can be summarized as
follows: i) The horizontal-branch (HB) morphology of M3 is significantly bluer
in its inner regions (observed with the Hubble Space Telescope) than in the
cluster outskirts (observed from the ground), i.e., M3 has an internal second
parameter. Most plausibly the mass loss on the red giant branch (RGB) has been
more efficient in the inner than in the outer regions of the cluster. ii) The
dispersion in mass of the Pal 3 HB is found to be very small -- consistent with
zero -- and we argue that this is unlikely to be due to a statistical
fluctuation. It is this small mass dispersion that leads to the most apparent
difference in the HB morphologies of M3 and Pal 3. iii) The relative HB types
of M3 and Pal 3, as measured by mean colors or parameters involving the number
of blue, variable, and red HB stars, can easily be accounted for by a fairly
small difference in age between these clusters, of order 0.5-1 Gyr -- which is
in good agreement with the relative age measurement, based on the clusters'
turnoffs, by VandenBerg (2000).Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, emulateapj5 style. The Astrophysical Journal,
in press. Figs. 1, 6, 9, 10 are in png format. The preprint (postscript
format) with full resolution (embedded) figures is available from
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~mc6v
No evidence of chemical anomalies in the bimodal turnoff cluster NGC 1806 in the LMC
We have studied the chemical composition of NGC 1806, a massive,
intermediate-age globular cluster that shows a double main sequence turnoff. We
analyzed a sample of high-resolution spectra (secured with FLAMES at the Very
Large Telescope) for 8 giant stars, members of the cluster, finding an average
iron content of [Fe/H]=--0.60 +- 0.01 dex and no evidence of intrinsic
star-to-star variations in the abundances of light elements (Na, O, Mg, Al).
Also, the (m_(F814W); m_(F336W)-m_(F814W)) color-magnitude diagram obtained by
combining optical and near-UV Hubble Space Telescope photometry exhibits a
narrow red giant branch, thus ruling out intrinsic variations of C and N
abundances in the cluster. These findings demonstrate that NGC 1806 does not
harbor chemically distinct sub-populations, at variance with what was found in
old globular clusters. In turn, this indicates that the double main sequence
turnoff phenomenon cannot be explained in the context of the self-enrichment
processes usually invoked to explain the chemical anomalies observed in old
globulars. Other solutions (i.e., stellar rotation, merging between clusters or
collisions with giant molecular clouds) should be envisaged to explain this
class of globulars.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ Letters; 15 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Another brick in understanding chemical and kinematical properties of BSSs: NGC 6752
We used high-resolution spectra acquired with the multifiber facility FLAMES
at the Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory to investigate
the chemical and kinematical properties of a sample of 22 Blue Straggler Stars
(BSSs) and 26 red giant branch stars in the nearby globular cluster NGC 6752.
We measured radial and rotational velocities and Fe, O and C abundances.
According to radial velocities, metallicity and proper motions we identified 18
BSSs as likely cluster members. We found that all the BSSs rotate slowly (less
than 40 km/s), similar to the findings in 47 Tucanae, NGC 6397 and M30. The Fe
abundance analysis reveals the presence of 3 BSSs affected by radiative
levitation (showing [Fe/H] significantly higher than that measured in "normal"
cluster stars), confirming that element transport mechanisms occur in the
photosphere of BSSs hotter than 8000 K. Finally, BSS C and O abundances are
consistent with those measured in dwarf stars. No C and O depletion ascribable
to mass transfer processes has been found on the atmospheres of the studied
BSSs (at odds with previous results for 47 Tucanae and M30), suggesting the
collisional origin for BSSs in NGC 6752 or that the CO-depletion is a transient
phenomenon.Comment: ApJ accepte
Two examples of applications of Kalman filtering to integrated systems of navigation
Two applications of optimal stochastic filters to navigation systems are described. The first is an air navigation system consisting of an inertial device (INS) and a Loran, plus an altimeter. The second is an application to a system of submarine navigation consisting of an inertial device (SINS) and an Omega plus a depth sensor
Multiple populations in the old and massive Small Magellanic Cloud globular cluster NGC121
We used a combination of optical and near-UV Hubble Space Telescope
photometry and FLAMES/ESO-VLT high-resolution spectroscopy to characterize the
stellar content of the old and massive globular cluster (GC) NGC121 in the
Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We report on the detection of multiple stellar
populations, the first case in the SMC stellar cluster system. This result
enforces the emerging scenario in which the presence of multiple stellar
populations is a distinctive-feature of old and massive GCs regardless of the
environment, as far as the light element distribution is concerned. We find
that second population (SG) stars are more centrally concentrated than first
(FG) ones. More interestingly, at odds with what typically observed in Galactic
GCs, we find that NGC121 is the only cluster so far to be dominated by FG stars
that account for more than 65% of the total cluster mass. In the framework
where GCs were born with a 90-95% of FG stars, this observational finding would
suggest that either NGC121 experienced a milder stellar mass-loss with respect
to Galactic GCs or it formed a smaller fraction of SG stars.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
The pure non-collisional Blue Straggler population in the giant stellar system omega Centauri
We have used high spatial resolution data from the Hubble Space Telescope and
wide-field ground-based observations to search for blue straggler stars (BSS)
over the entire radial extent of the large stellar system omega Centauri. We
have detected the largest population of BSS ever observed in any stellar
system. Even though the sample is restricted to the brightest portion of the
BSS sequence, more than 300 candidates have been identified. BSS are thought to
be produced by the evolution of binary systems (either formed by stellar
collisions or mass exchange in binary stars). Since systems like Galactic
globular clusters (GGC) and omega Cen evolve dynamically on time-scales
significantly shorter than their ages, binaries should have settled toward the
center, showing a more concentrated radial distribution than the ordinary, less
massive single stars. Indeed, in all GGCs which have been surveyed for BSS, the
BSS distribution is peaked at the center. Conversely, in omega Cen we find that
the BSS share the same radial distribution as the adopted reference
populations. This is the cleanest evidence ever found that such a stellar
system is not fully relaxed even in the central region. We further argue that
the absence of central concentration in the BSS distribution rules out a
collisional origin. Thus, the omega Cen BSS are the purest and largest
population of non-collisional BSS ever observed. Our results allow the first
empirical quantitative estimate of the production rate of BSS via this channel.
BSS in omega Cen may represent the best local template for modeling the BSS
populations in distant galaxies where they cannot be individually observed.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication by Ap
Environmental induced renormalization effects in quantum Hall edge states
We propose a general mechanism for renormalization of the tunneling exponents
in edge states of the fractional quantum Hall effect. Mutual effects of the
coupling with out-of-equilibrium 1/f noise and dissipation are considered both
for the Laughlin sequence and for composite co- and counter-propagating edge
states with Abelian or non-Abelian statistics. For states with
counter-propagating modes we demonstrate the robustness of the proposed
mechanism in the so called disorder-dominated phase. Prototypes of these
states, such as \nu=2/3 and \nu=5/2, are discussed in detail and the rich
phenomenology induced by the presence of a noisy environment is presented. The
proposed mechanism justifies the strong renormalizations reported in many
experimental observations carried out at low temperatures. We show how
environmental effects could affect the relevance of the tunneling excitations,
leading to important implications in particular for the \nu=5/2 case.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
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