4,735 research outputs found
Abundance ratios of red giants in low mass ultra faint dwarf spheroidal galaxies
Low mass dwarf spheroidal galaxies are key objects for our understanding of
the chemical evolution of the pristine Universe and the Local Group of
galaxies. Abundance ratios in stars of these objects can be used to better
understand their star formation and chemical evolution. We report on the
analysis of a sample of 11 stars belonging to 5 different ultra faint dwarf
spheroidal galaxies (UfDSph) based on X-Shooter spectra obtained at the VLT.
Medium resolution spectra have been used to determine the detailed chemical
composition of their atmosphere. We performed a standard 1D LTE analysis to
compute the abundances.
Considering all the stars as representative of the same population of low
mass galaxies, we found that the [alpha/Fe] ratios vs [Fe/H] decreases as the
metallicity of the star increases in a way similar to what is found for the
population of stars belonging to dwarf spheroidal galaxies. The main difference
is that the solar [alpha/Fe] is reached at a much lower metallicity for the
UfDSph than the dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
We report for the first time the abundance of strontium in CVnI. The star we
analyzed in this galaxy has a very high [Sr/Fe] and a very low upper limit of
barium which makes it a star with an exceptionally high [Sr/Ba] ratio.
Our results seem to indicate that the galaxies which have produced the bulk
of their stars before the reionization (fossil galaxies) have lower [X/Fe]
ratios at a given metallicity than the galaxies that have experienced a
discontinuity in their star formation rate (quenching).Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, submitted to A&
Ca II TRIPLET SPECTROSCOPY OF SMALL MAGELLANIC CLOUD RED GIANTS. IV. ABUNDANCES FOR A LARGE SAMPLE OF FIELD STARS AND COMPARISON WITH THE CLUSTER SAMPLE
This paper represents a major step forward in the systematic and homogeneous study of Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) star clusters and field stars carried out by applying the calcium triplet technique. We present in this work the radial velocity and metallicity of approximately 400 red giant stars in 15 SMC fields, with typical errors of about 7 km s-1 and 0.16 dex, respectively. We added to this information our previously determined metallicity values for 29 clusters and approximately 350 field stars using the identical techniques. Using this enlarged sample, we analyze the metallicity distribution and gradient in this galaxy. We also compare the chemical properties of the clusters and of their surrounding fields. We find a number of surprising results. While the clusters, taken as a whole, show no strong evidence for a metallicity gradient (MG), the field stars exhibit a clear negative gradient in the inner region of the SMC, consistent with the recent results of Dobbie et al. For distances to the center of the galaxy less than 4\ub0, field stars show a considerably smaller metallicity dispersion than that of the clusters. However, in the external SMC regions, clusters and field stars exhibit similar metallicity dispersions. Moreover, in the inner region of the SMC, clusters appear to be concentrated in two groups: one more metal-poor and another more metal-rich than field stars. Individually considered, neither cluster group presents an MG. Most surprisingly, the MG for both stellar populations (clusters and field stars) appears to reverse sign in the outer regions of the SMC. The difference between the cluster metallicity and the mean metallicity of the surrounding field stars turns out to be a strong function of the cluster metallicity. These results could be indicating different chemical evolution histories for these two SMC stellar populations. They could also indicate variations in the chemical behavior of the SMC in its internal and external regions
Detailed abundances in stars belonging to ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal galaxies
We report preliminary results concerning the detailed chemical composition of
metal poor stars belonging to close ultra-faint dwarf galaxies (hereafter
UfDSphs). The abundances have been determined thanks to spectra obtained with
X-Shooter, a high efficiency spectrograph installed on one of the ESO VLT
units. The sample of ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal stars have abundance ratios
slightly lower to what is measured in field halo star of the same
metallicity.We did not find extreme abundances in our Hercules stars as the one
found by Koch for his 2 Hercules stars. The synthesis of the neutron capture
elements Ba and Sr seems to originate from the same nucleosynthetic process in
operation during the early stages of the galactic evolution.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure; OMEG11 conference (Tokyo, Nov 2011
Anchors for the Cosmic Distance Scale: the Cepheid QZ Normae in the Open Cluster NGC 6067
Cepheids are key to establishing the cosmic distance scale. Therefore it's
important to assess the viability of QZ Nor, V340 Nor, and GU Nor as
calibrators for Leavitt's law via their purported membership in the open
cluster NGC 6067. The following suite of evidence confirms that QZ Nor and V340
Nor are members of NGC 6067, whereas GU Nor likely lies in the foreground: (i)
existing radial velocities for QZ Nor and V340 Nor agree with that established
for the cluster (-39.4+-1.2 km/s) to within 1 km/s, whereas GU Nor exhibits a
markedly smaller value; (ii) a steep velocity-distance gradient characterizes
the sight-line toward NGC 6067, thus implying that objects sharing common
velocities are nearly equidistant; (iii) a radial profile constructed for NGC
6067 indicates that QZ Nor is within the cluster bounds, despite being 20' from
the cluster center; (iv) new BVJH photometry for NGC 6067 confirms the cluster
lies d=1.75+-0.10 kpc distant, a result that matches Wesenheit distances
computed for QZ Nor/V340 Nor using the Benedict et al. (2007, HST parallaxes)
calibration. QZ Nor is a cluster Cepheid that should be employed as a
calibrator for the cosmic distance scale.Comment: To appear in ApS
Communications Biophysics
Contains reports on three research projects.United States Air Force (Contract AF19(604)-4112
Tidal dwarfs in the M81 group: the second generation?
We derive quantitative star formation histories of the four suspected tidal
dwarf galaxies in the M81 group, HolmbergIX, BK3N, Arp-loop (A0952+69), and
Garland, using Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Planetary Camera2 images in
F606W and F814W obtained as part of a Snapshot survey of dwarf galaxies in the
Local Universe. We consider the spatial distribution and ages of resolved
stellar populations in these dwarf irregular galaxies. We use synthetic
color-magnitude diagrams to derive the ages of the major star formation
episodes, star formation rates, and approximate metallicity ranges. All the
galaxies show evidence of continuous star formation between about 20 and 200
Myr ago with star formation rates in the range 7.5*10^(-3)- 7.6*10^(-4)
M(sun)/yr. The metallicity of the detected stars spans a wide range, and have
lower than solar abundance. A possible scenario is that all four dwarf galaxies
were formed from material in the metal-poor outer part of the giant spiral
galaxy M81 after the tidal interaction between M81, M82, and NGC3077 about 200
Myr ago. While we do not directly detect pronounced old stellar populations,
the photometric limits of our data are such that the presence of such a
population is not entirely ruled out
The young Galactic star cluster [DBS2003]179
Recent near- and mid-infrared surveys have brought evidence that the Milky
Way continues to form massive clusters. We carry out a program to determine the
basic physical properties of the new massive cluster candidate [DBS2003]179.
Medium-resolution K-band spectra and deep near-infrared images of [DBS2003]179
were used to derive the spectral types of eight member stars, and to estimate
the distance and reddening to the cluster. Seven of ten stars with spectra show
emission lines. Comparison with template spectra indicated that they are early
O-type stars. The mean radial velocity of the cluster is Vrad=-77+-6 km/s.
Knowing the spectral types of the members and the color excesses, we determined
extinction Av~16.6 and distance modulus (m-M)0~14.5 mag (D~7.9 kpc). The
presence of early O-stars and a lack of red supergiants suggests a cluster age
of 2-5Myr. The total cluster mass is approximated to 0.7x10^4 Msun and it is
not yet dynamically relaxed.
The candidate [DBS2003]179 further increases the family of the massive young
clusters in the Galaxy, although it appears less massive than the prototypical
starburst clusters.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Ultra-deep GEMINI near-infrared observations of the bulge globular cluster NGC 6624
We used ultra-deep and images secured with the near-infrared GSAOI
camera assisted by the multi-conjugate adaptive optics system GeMS at the
GEMINI South Telescope in Chile, to obtain a (, ) color-magnitude
diagram (CMD) for the bulge globular cluster NGC 6624. We obtained the deepest
and most accurate near-infrared CMD from the ground for this cluster, by
reaching 21.5, approximately 8 magnitudes below the horizontal
branch level. The entire extension of the Main Sequence (MS) is nicely sampled
and at 20 we detected the so-called MS "knee" in a purely
near-infrared CMD. By taking advantage of the exquisite quality of the data, we
estimated the absolute age of NGC 6624 ( = 12.0 0.5 Gyr), which
turns out to be in good agreement with previous studies in the literature. We
also analyzed the luminosity and mass functions of MS stars down to M
0.45 M finding evidence of a significant increase of low-mass stars
at increasing distances from the cluster center. This is a clear signature of
mass segregation, confirming that NGC 6624 is in an advanced stage of dynamical
evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ. 39 pages, 19 figures, 1 tabl
Observations of Lick Standard Stars Using the SCORPIO Multi-Slit Unit at the SAO 6-m Telescope
We present Lick line-index measurements of standard stars from the list of
Worthey. The spectra were taken with the multi-slit unit of the SCORPIO
spectrograph at the 6-m Special Astrophysical observatory telescope. We
describe in detail our method of analysis and explain the importance of using
the Lick index system for studying extragalactic globular clusters. Our results
show that the calibration of our instrumental system to the standard Lick
system can be performed with high confidence.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
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