22 research outputs found
Boron Abundances in Main Sequence B-type Stars: A Test of Rotational Depletion during Main Sequence Evolution
Boron abundances have been derived for seven main sequence B-type stars from
HST STIS spectra around the B III 2066 A line. In two stars, boron appears to
be undepleted with respect to the presumed initial abundance. In one star,
boron is detectable but it is clearly depleted. In the other four stars, boron
is undetectable implying depletions of 1 to 2 dex. Three of these four stars
are nitrogen enriched, but the fourth shows no enrichment of nitrogen. Only
rotationally induced mixing predicts that boron depletions are unaccompanied by
nitrogen enrichments. The inferred rate of boron depletion from our
observations is in good agreement with these predictions. Other boron-depleted
nitrogen-normal stars are identified from the literature. Also, several
boron-depleted nitrogen-rich stars are identified, and while all fall on the
boron-nitrogen trend predicted by rotationally-induced mixing, a majority have
nitrogen enrichments that are not uniquely explained by rotation.
The spectra have also been used to determine iron-group (Cr, Mn, Fe, and Ni)
abundances. The seven B-type stars have near solar iron-group abundances, as
expected for young stars in the solar neighborhood. We have also analysed the
halo B-type star, PG0832+676. We find [Fe/H] = -0.88 +/- 0.10, and the absence
of the B III line gives the upper limit [B/H]<2.5. These and other published
abundances are used to infer the star's evolutionary status as a post-AGB star.Comment: 31 pages, 14 figures. accepted to Ap
The Planetary Nebula Luminosity Function at the Dawn of Gaia
The [O III] 5007 Planetary Nebula Luminosity Function (PNLF) is an excellent
extragalactic standard candle. In theory, the PNLF method should not work at
all, since the luminosities of the brightest planetary nebulae (PNe) should be
highly sensitive to the age of their host stellar population. Yet the method
appears robust, as it consistently produces < 10% distances to galaxies of all
Hubble types, from the earliest ellipticals to the latest-type spirals and
irregulars. It is therefore uniquely suited for cross-checking the results of
other techniques and finding small offsets between the Population I and
Population II distance ladders. We review the calibration of the method and
show that the zero points provided by Cepheids and the Tip of the Red Giant
Branch are in excellent agreement. We then compare the results of the PNLF with
those from Surface Brightness Fluctuation measurements, and show that, although
both techniques agree in a relative sense, the latter method yields distances
that are ~15% larger than those from the PNLF. We trace this discrepancy back
to the calibration galaxies and argue that, due to a small systematic error
associated with internal reddening, the true distance scale likely falls
between the extremes of the two methods. We also demonstrate how PNLF
measurements in the early-type galaxies that have hosted Type Ia supernovae can
help calibrate the SN Ia maximum magnitude-rate of decline relation. Finally,
we discuss how the results from space missions such as Kepler and Gaia can help
our understanding of the PNLF phenomenon and improve our knowledge of the
physics of local planetary nebulae.Comment: 12 pages, invited review at the conference "The Fundamental Cosmic
Distance Scale: State of the Art and Gaia Perspective", to appear in
Astrophysics and Space Scienc
The Origins and Evolutionary Status of B Stars Found Far From the Galactic Plane II: Kinematics and Full Sample Analysis
This paper continues the analysis of faint high latitude B stars from Martin
(2004). Here we analyze the kinematics of the stars and combine them with the
abundance information from the first paper to classify each one. The sample
contains 31 Population I runaways, fifteen old evolved stars (including five
BHB stars, three post-HB stars, a pulsating helium dwarf, and six stars of
ambiguous classification), one F-dwarf, and two stars which do not easily fit
in one of the other categories. No star in the sample unambiguously shows the
characteristics of a young massive star formed in situ in the halo. The two
unclassified stars are probably extreme Population I runaways. The low binary
frequency and rotational velocity distribution of the Population I runaways
imply that most were ejected from dense star clusters by DES (dynamic ejection
scenario). However we remain puzzled by the lack of runaway Be stars. We also
confirm that PB 166 and HIP 41979 are both nearby solar-metallicity BHB stars.Comment: 59 pages including 14 Figures, 12 Tables; Accepted for publication in
the Astronomical Journa
PS1-12sk is a Peculiar Supernova From a He-rich Progenitor System in a Brightest Cluster Galaxy Environment
We report on our discovery and observations of the Pan-STARRS1 supernova (SN)
PS1-12sk, a transient with properties that indicate atypical star formation in
its host galaxy cluster or pose a challenge to popular progenitor system models
for this class of explosion. The optical spectra of PS1-12sk classify it as a
Type Ibn SN (c.f. SN 2006jc), dominated by intermediate-width (3x10^3 km/s) and
time variable He I emission. Our multi-wavelength monitoring establishes the
rise time dt = 9-23 days and shows an NUV-NIR SED with temperature > 17x10^3 K
and a peak rise magnitude of Mz = -18.9 mag. SN Ibn spectroscopic properties
are commonly interpreted as the signature of a massive star (17 - 100 M_sun)
explosion within a He-enriched circumstellar medium. However, unlike previous
Type Ibn supernovae, PS1-12sk is associated with an elliptical brightest
cluster galaxy, CGCG 208-042 (z = 0.054) in cluster RXC J0844.9+4258. The
expected probability of an event like PS1-12sk in such environments is low
given the measured infrequency of core-collapse SNe in red sequence galaxies
compounded by the low volumetric rate of SN Ibn. Furthermore, we find no
evidence of star formation at the explosion site to sensitive limits (Sigma
Halpha < 2x10^-3 M_sun/yr/kpc^2). We therefore discuss white dwarf binary
systems as a possible progenitor channel for SNe Ibn. We conclude that PS1-12sk
represents either a fortuitous and statistically unlikely discovery, evidence
for a top-heavy IMF in galaxy cluster cooling flow filaments, or the first clue
suggesting an alternate progenitor channel for Type Ibn SNe.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, v2 as accepted by ApJ, more information at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~nsanders/papers/12sk/summary.ht