311 research outputs found
The catalogue of OB associations in IC 1613
We present a catalogue of OB associations in IC 1613. Using an automatic and
objective method (Battinelli's 1991 technique) 60 objects were found. The size
distribution reveals a significant peak at about 60 parsecs if a distance
modulus of 24.27 mag is assumed. Spatial distributions of the detected
associations and H II regions are strongly correlated.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, A&A accepte
A not so massive cluster hosting a very massive star
We present the first physical characterization of the young open cluster VVV
CL041. We spectroscopically observed the cluster main-sequence stellar
population and a very-massive star candidate: WR62-2. CMFGEN modeling to our
near-infrared spectra indicates that WR62-2 is a very luminous (10) and massive () star.Comment: 1 page, 1 figure, to be published in the "International Workshop on
Wolf-Rayet Stars conference proceedings" by Universit\"atsverlag Potsdam
(editors: W.-R. Hamann, A. Sander, and H. Todt
Identifying the ejected population from disintegrating multiple systems
Kinematic studies of the Hipparcos catalogue have revealed associations that
are best explained as disintegrating multiple systems, presumably resulting
from a dynamical encounter between single/multiple systems in the field (Li et
al. 2009). In this work we explore the possibility that known ultra-cool dwarfs
may be components of disintegrating multiple systems, and consider the
implications for the properties of these objects. We will present here the
methods/techniques that can be used to search for and identify disintegrating
benchmark systems in three database/catalogues: Dwarf Archive, the Hipparcos
Main Catalogue, and the Gliese-Jahrei{\ss} Catalogue. Placing distance
constraints on objects with parallax or colour-magnitude information from
spectrophotometry allowed us to identify common distance associations. Proper
motion measurements allowed us to separate common proper motion multiples from
our sample of disintegrating candidates. Moreover, proper motion and positional
information allowed us to select candidate systems based on relative component
positions that were tracked back and projected forward through time. Using this
method we identified one candidate disintegrating quadruple association, and
two candidate disintegrating binaries, all of them containing one ultra-cool
dwarf.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, proceeding of The 19th Cambridge Workshop on Cool
Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Su
Obscured clusters.IV. The most massive stars in [DBS2003]179
Aims. We report new results for the massive evolved and main sequence members
of the young galactic cluster DBS2003 179. We determine the physical parameters
and investigate the high-mass stellar content of the cluster, as well as of its
close vicinity. Methods. Our analysis is based on ISAAC/VLT moderate-resolution
(R\approx4000) infrared spectroscopy of the brightest cluster members. We
derive stellar parameters for sixteen of the stellar members, using full
non-LTE modeling of the obtained spectra. Results. The cluster contains three
late WN or WR/LBV stars (Obj 4, Obj 15, and Obj 20:MDM32) and at least 5 OIf
and 5 OV stars. According to the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram for DBS2003 179,
the WR stars show masses above 85Msun, the OIf stars are between 40 and 80Msun,
and the main sequence O stars are >20Msun. There are indications of binarity
for Obj 4 and Obj 11, and Obj 3 shows a variable spectrum. The cluster is
surrounded by a continuous protostar formation region most probably triggered
by DBS2003 179. Conclusions. We confirm that DBS2003 179 is young massive
cluster (2.5 10^4Msun) very close to the Galactic center at the distance of
7.9+-0.8 kpc.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures, accepted in A&
Identifying Ultra-Cool Dwarfs at Low Galactic Latitudes: A Southern Candidate Catalogue
We present an Ultra-Cool Dwarf (UCD) catalogue compiled from low southern
Galactic latitudes and mid-plane, from a cross-correlation of the 2MASS and
SuperCOSMOS surveys. The catalogue contains 246 members identified from 5042
sq. deg. within 220 deg. <= l <= 360 deg. and 0 deg. < l <= 30 deg., for |b| <=
15 deg. Sixteen candidates are spectroscopically confirmed in the near-IR as
UCDs with spectral types from M7.5V to L9. Our catalogue selection method is
presented enabling UCDs from ~M8V to the L-T transition to be selected down to
a 2MASS limiting magnitude of Ks ~= 14.5 mag. This method does not require
candidates to have optical detections for catalogue inclusion. An optimal set
of optical/near-IR and reduced proper-motion selection criteria have been
defined that includes: an Rf and Ivn photometric surface gravity test, a dual
Rf-band variability check, and an additional photometric classification scheme
to selectively limit contaminants. We identify four candidates as possible
companions to nearby Hipparcos stars -- observations are needed to identify
these as potential benchmark UCD companions. We also identify twelve UCDs
within a possible distance 20 pc, three are previously unknown of which two are
estimated within 10 pc, complimenting the nearby volume-limited census of UCDs.
An analysis of the catalogue spatial completeness provides estimates for
distance completeness over three UCD MJ ranges, while Monte-Carlo simulations
provide an estimate of catalogue areal completeness at the 75 per cent level.
We estimate a UCD space density of Rho (total) = (6.41+-3.01)x10^3/pc^3 over
the range of 10.5 <= MJ ~< 14.9, similar to values measured at higher Galactic
latitudes (|b| ~> 10 deg.) in the field population and obtained from more
robust spectroscopically confirmed UCD samples.Comment: MNRAS accepted April 2012. Contains 30 figures and 11 tables. Tables
2 and 6 to be published in full and on-line only. The on-line tables can also
be obtained by contacting the author
Searching for Faint Comoving Companions to the α Centauri system in the VVV Survey Infrared Images
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. © 2017 Crown Copyright. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.The VVV survey has observed the southern disk of the Milky Way in the near infrared, covering 240 deg in the filters. We search the VVV Survey images in a 19 deg field around Centauri, the nearest stellar system to the Sun, to look for possible overlooked companions that the baseline in time of VVV would be able to uncover. The photometric depth of our search reaches 19.3 mag, 19 mag, and 17 mag. This search has yielded no new companions in Centauri system, setting an upper mass limit for any unseen companion well into the brown dwarf/planetary mass regime. The apparent magnitude limits were turned into effective temperature limits, and the presence of companion objects with effective temperatures warmer than 325K can be ruled out using different state-of-the-art atmospheric models. These limits were transformed into mass limits using evolutionary models, companions with masses above 11 M were discarded, extending the constraints recently provided in the literature up to projected distances of dPeer reviewedFinal Published versio
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