92 research outputs found
The S2N2 metallicity calibrator and the abundance gradient of M 33
We introduce the log(Ha/[SII]6717+6731) vs. log(Ha/[NII]6583) (S2N2)
diagnostic diagram as metallicity and ionisation parameter indicator for HII
regions in external galaxies. The location of HII regions in the S2N2 diagram
was studied both empirically and theoretically. We found that, for a wide range
of metallicities, the S2N2 diagram gives single valued results in the
metallicity-ionisation parameter plane. We demonstrate that the S2N2 diagram is
a powerful tool to estimate metallicities of high-redshift (z ~ 2) HII
galaxies. Finally, we derive the metallicity for 76 HII regions in M33 from the
S2N2 diagram and calculate an O/H abundance gradient for this galaxy of -0.05
(+-0.01) dex kpc^-1.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Extracting H flux from photometric data in the J-PLUS survey
We present the main steps that will be taken to extract H emission
flux from Javalambre Photometric Local Universe Survey (J-PLUS) photometric
data. For galaxies with , the H+[NII] emission is
covered by the J-PLUS narrow-band filter . We explore three different
methods to extract the H + [NII] flux from J-PLUS photometric data: a
combination of a broad-band and a narrow-band filter ( and ), two
broad-band and a narrow-band one (, and ), and a SED-fitting
based method using 8 photometric points. To test these methodologies, we
simulated J-PLUS data from a sample of 7511 SDSS spectra with measured
H flux. Based on the same sample, we derive two empirical relations to
correct the derived H+[NII] flux from dust extinction and [NII]
contamination. We find that the only unbiased method is the SED fitting based
one. The combination of two filters underestimates the measurements of the
H + [NII] flux by a 28%, while the three filters method by a 9%. We
study the error budget of the SED-fitting based method and find that, in
addition to the photometric error, our measurements have a systematic
uncertainty of a 4.3%. Several sources contribute to this uncertainty:
differences between our measurement procedure and the one used to derive the
spectroscopic values, the use of simple stellar populations as templates, and
the intrinsic errors of the spectra, which were not taken into account. Apart
from that, the empirical corrections for dust extinction and [NII]
contamination add an extra uncertainty of 14%. Given the J-PLUS photometric
system, the best methodology to extract H + [NII] flux is the
SED-fitting based one. Using this method, we are able to recover reliable
H fluxes for thousands of nearby galaxies in a robust and homogeneous
way.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures. Minor changes to match the published versio
Galactic Plane H Surveys: IPHAS & VPHAS+
The optical Galactic Plane H surveys IPHAS and VPHAS+ are
dramatically improving our understanding of Galactic stellar populations and
stellar evolution by providing large samples of stars in short lived, but
important, evolutionary phases, and high quality homogeneous photometry and
images over the entire Galactic Plane. Here I summarise some of the
contributions these surveys have already made to our understanding of a number
of key areas of stellar and Galactic astronomy.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, refereed proceeding of the "The Universe of
Digital Sky Surveys" conference, November 2014, to be published in the
Astrophysics and Space Science Proceeding
Spectral and timing properties of the accreting X-ray millisecond pulsar IGR J17498-2921
We analyze the spectral and timing properties of IGR J17498-2921 and the
characteristics of X-ray bursts to constrain the physical processes responsible
for the X-ray production in this class of sources. The broad-band average
spectrum is well-described by thermal Comptonization with an electron
temperature of kT_e ~ 50 keV, soft seed photons of kT_bb ~ 1 keV, and Thomson
optical depth \taut ~ 1 in a slab geometry. The slab area corresponds to a
black body radius of R_bb ~9 km. During the outburst, the spectrum stays
remarkably stable with plasma and soft seed photon temperatures and scattering
optical depth that are constant within the errors. This behavior has been
interpreted as indicating that the X-ray emission originates above the neutron
star (NS) surface in a hot slab (either the heated NS surface or the accretion
shock). The INTEGRAL, RXTE, and Swift data reveal the X-ray pulsation at a
period of 2.5 milliseconds up to ~65 keV. The pulsed fraction is consistent
with being constant, i.e. energy independent and has a typical value of 6-7%.
The nearly sinusoidal pulses show soft lags that seem to saturate near 10 keV
at a rather small value of ~ -60\mu s with those observed in other accreting
pulsars. The short burst profiles indicate that there is a hydrogen-poor
material at ignition, which suggests either that the accreted material is
hydrogen-deficient, or that the CNO metallicity is up to a factor of about two
times solar. However, the variation in the burst recurrence time as a function
of \dot{m} (inferred from the X-ray flux) is much smaller than predicted by
helium-ignition models.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1012.022
IPHAS and the symbiotic stars. I. Selection method and first discoveries
The study of symbiotic stars is essential to understand important aspects of
stellar evolution in interacting binaries. Their observed population in the
Galaxy is however poorly known, and is one to three orders of magnitudes
smaller than the predicted population size. IPHAS, the INT Photometric Halpha
survey of the Northern Galactic plane, gives us the opportunity to make a
systematic, complete search for symbiotic stars in a magnitude-limited volume,
and discover a significant number of new systems.
A method of selecting candidate symbiotic stars by combining IPHAS and
near-IR (2MASS) colours is presented. It allows us to distinguish symbiotic
binaries from normal stars and most of the other types of Halpha emission line
stars in the Galaxy. The only exception are T Tauri stars, which can however be
recognized because of their concentration in star forming regions. Using these
selection criteria, we discuss the classification of a list of 4338 IPHAS stars
with Halpha in emission. 1500 to 2000 of them are likely to be Be stars. Among
the remaining objects, 1183 fulfill our photometric constraints to be
considered candidate symbiotic stars. The spectroscopic confirmation of three
of these objects, which are the first new symbiotic stars discovered by IPHAS,
proves the potential of the survey and selection method.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysics. 12 pages, 8
figure
First release of the IPHAS catalogue of new extended planetary nebulae
Date of Acceptance: 30/06/2014We present the first results of our search for new, extended planetary nebulae (PNe) based on careful, systematic, visual scrutiny of the imaging data from the Isaac Newton Telescope Photometric Ha Survey of the Northern Galactic plane (IPHAS). The newly uncovered PNe will help to improve the census of this important population of Galactic objects that serve as key windows into the late-stage evolution of low- to intermediate-mass stars. They will also facilitate study of the faint end of the ensemble Galactic PN luminosity function. The sensitivity and coverage of IPHAS allows PNe to be found in regions of greater extinction in the Galactic plane and/or those PNe in a more advanced evolutionary state and at larger distances compared to the general Galactic PN population. Using a set of newly revised optical diagnostic diagrams in combination with access to a powerful, new, multiwavelength imaging data base, we have identified 159 true, likely and possible PNe for this first catalogue release. The ability of IPHAS to unveil PNe at low Galactic latitudes and towards the Galactic Anticentre, compared to previous surveys, makes this survey an ideal tool to contribute to the improvement of our knowledge of the whole Galactic PN population.Peer reviewe
The Iron abundance in Galactic Planetary Nebulae
We constrain the iron abundance in a sample of 33 low-ionization Galactic
planetary nebulae (PNe) using [Fe III] lines and correcting for the
contribution of higher ionization states with ionization correction factors
(ICFs) that take into account uncertainties in the atomic data. We find very
low iron abundances in all the objects, suggesting that more than 90% of their
iron atoms are condensed onto dust grains. This number is based on the solar
iron abundance and implies a lower limit on the dust-to-gas mass ratio, due
solely to iron, of M_dust/M_gas>1.3x10^{-3} for our sample. The depletion
factors of different PNe cover about two orders of magnitude, probably
reflecting differences in the formation, growth, or destruction of their dust
grains. However, we do not find any systematic difference between the gaseous
iron abundances calculated for C-rich and O-rich PNe, suggesting similar iron
depletion efficiencies in both environments. The iron abundances of our sample
PNe are similar to those derived following the same procedure for a group of 10
Galactic H II regions. These high depletion factors argue for high depletion
efficiencies of refractory elements onto dust grains both in molecular clouds
and AGB stars, and low dust destruction efficiencies both in interstellar and
circumstellar ionized gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 15 pages, 4 Postscript figures,
corrected typos, Tables 2 and 3 correcte
Candidate planetary nebulae in the IPHAS photometric catalogue
Original article can be found at: http://www.aanda.org/ Copyright European Southern Observatory. DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200912002Context. We have carried out a semi-automated search for planetary nebulae (PNe) in the INT photometric H-alpha survey (IPHAS) catalogue. We present the PN search and the list of selected candidates. We cross correlate the selected candidates with a number of existing infrared galactic surveys in order to gain further insight into the nature of the candidates. Spectroscopy of a subset of objects is used to estimate the number of PNe present in the entire candidate list. Aims. The overall aim of the IPHAS PN project is to carry out a deep census of PNe in the northern Galactic plane, an area where PN detections are clearly lacking. Methods. The PN search is carried out on the IPHAS photometric catalogue. The candidate selection is based on the IPHAS and 2MASS/UKIDSS colours of the objects and the final candidate selection is made visually. Results. From the original list of ~600 million IPHAS detections we have selected a total of 1005 objects. Of these, 224 are known objects, leaving us with 781 PN candidates. Based on the initial follow-up spectroscopy, we expect the list to include very young and proto-PNe in addition to genuine, normal PNe (~16%) and emission line objects other than PNe. We present additional criteria to select the most probable PN candidates from our candidate list.Peer reviewe
Stellar populations of galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey up to . I. MUFFIT: A Multi-Filter Fitting code for stellar population diagnostics
We present MUFFIT, a new generic code optimized to retrieve the main stellar
population parameters of galaxies in photometric multi-filter surveys, and we
check its reliability and feasibility with real galaxy data from the ALHAMBRA
survey. Making use of an error-weighted -test, we compare the
multi-filter fluxes of galaxies with the synthetic photometry of mixtures of
two single stellar populations at different redshifts and extinctions, to
provide through a Monte Carlo method the most likely range of stellar
population parameters (mainly ages and metallicities), extinctions, redshifts,
and stellar masses. To improve the diagnostic reliability, MUFFIT identifies
and removes from the analysis those bands that are significantly affected by
emission lines. We highlight that the retrieved age-metallicity locus for a
sample of early-type galaxies in ALHAMBRA at different stellar
mass bins are in very good agreement with the ones from SDSS spectroscopic
diagnostics. Moreover, a one-to-one comparison between the redshifts, ages,
metallicities, and stellar masses derived spectroscopically for SDSS and by
MUFFIT for ALHAMBRA reveals good qualitative agreements in all the parameters.
In addition, and using as input the results from photometric-redshift codes,
MUFFIT improves the photometric-redshift accuracy by -, and it
also detects nebular emissions in galaxies, providing physical information
about their strengths. Our results show the potential of multi-filter galaxy
data to conduct reliable stellar population studies with the appropiate
analysis techniques, as MUFFIT.Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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