65 research outputs found
Star formation history in the SMC: the case of NGC602
Deep HST/ACS photometry of the young cluster NGC 602, located in the remote
low density "wing" of the Small Magellanic Cloud, reveals numerous pre-main
sequence stars as well as young stars on the main sequence. The resolved
stellar content thus provides a basis for studying the star formation history
into recent times and constraining several stellar population properties, such
as the present day mass function, the initial mass function and the binary
fraction. To better characterize the pre-main sequence population, we present a
new set of model stellar evolutionary tracks for this evolutionary phase with
metallicity appropriate for the Small Magellanic Cloud (Z = 0.004). We use a
stellar population synthesis code, which takes into account a full range of
stellar evolution phases to derive our best estimate for the star formation
history in the region by comparing observed and synthetic color-magnitude
diagrams. The derived present day mass function for NGC 602 is consistent with
that resulting from the synthetic diagrams. The star formation rate in the
region has increased with time on a scale of tens of Myr, reaching in the last 2.5 Myr, comparable to what is
found in Galactic OB associations. Star formation is most complete in the main
cluster but continues at moderate levels in the gas-rich periphery of the
nebula.Comment: 24 pages. Accepted for publication in A
The Complex Star Formation History of NGC 1569
We present new results on the star formation history of the dwarf irregular
galaxy NGC 1569. The data were obtained with Hubble Space Telescope's
NICMOS/NIC2 in the F110W (J) and F160W (H) near-infrared (NIR) filters and
interpreted with the synthetic color-magnitude diagram method. The galaxy
experienced a complex star formation (SF) activity. The best fit to the data is
found by assuming three episodes of activity in the last 1-2 Gyr. The most
recent and strong episode constrained by these NIR data started ~37 Myr ago and
ended ~13 Myr ago, although we cannot exclude the possibility that up to three
SF episodes occurred in this time interval. The average star-formation rate
(SFR) of the episode is 3.2 Msun yr-1 kpc-2, in agreement with literature data.
A previous episode produced stars between 150 Myr and 40 Myr ago, with a mean
SFR about 2/3 lower than the mean SFR of the youngest episode. An older SF
episode occurred about 1 Gyr ago. All these SFRs are 2-3 orders of magnitude
higher than those derived for late-type dwarfs of the Local Group. In all cases
an initial mass function similar to Salpeter's allows for a good reproduction
of the data, but we cannot exclude flatter mass functions. These results have
been obtained adopting a distance of 2.2 Mpc and a reddening E(B-V)=0.56. A
larger distance would require younger episodes and higher SFRs. We have
explored some possible scenarios using the astrated mass in the best fit model,
in order to constrain the past star formation history. We cannot rule out a low
rate in the past SF but we can safely conclude that the last 1-2 Gyr have been
peculiar.Comment: Accepted by AJ, 2005, vol 129, 14 pages, 9 figure
Past and present star formation in the SMC: NGC 346 and its neighborhood
In the quest of understanding how star formation occurs and propagates in the
low metallicity environment of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), we acquired
deep F555W (~V), and F814W (~I) HST/ACS images of the young and massive star
forming region NGC 346. These images and their photometric analysis provide us
with a snapshot of the star formation history of the region. We find evidence
for star formation extending from ~10 Gyr in the past until ~150 Myr in the
field of the SMC. The youngest stellar population (~3 +/- 1 Myr) is associated
with the NGC 346 cluster. It includes a rich component of low mass pre-main
sequence stars mainly concentrated in a number of sub-clusters, spatially co-
located with CO clumps previously detected by Rubio et al. (2000). Within our
analysis uncertainties, these sub-clusters appear coeval with each other. The
most massive stars appear concentrated in the central sub-clusters, indicating
possible mass segregation. A number of embedded clusters are also observed.
This finding, combined with the overall wealth of dust and gas, could imply
that star formation is still active. An intermediate age star cluster, BS90,
formed ~4.3 +/-0.1 Gyr ago, is also present in the region. Thus, this region of
the SMC has supported star formation with varying levels of intensity over much
of the cosmic time.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables; AJ accepte
The Stellar Mass Distribution in the Giant Star Forming Region NGC 346
Deep F555W and F814W Hubble Space Telescope ACS images are the basis for a
study of the present day mass function (PDMF) of NGC346, the largest active
star forming region in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We find a PDMF slope
of Gamma=-1.43+/-0.18 in the mass range 0.8-60 Mo, in excellent agreement with
the Salpeter Initial Mass Function (IMF) in the solar neighborhood. Caveats on
the conversion of the PDMF to the IMF are discussed. The PDMF slope changes, as
a function of the radial distance from the center of the NGC 346 star cluster,
indicating a segregation of the most massive stars. This segregation is likely
primordial considering the young age (~3 Myr) of NGC346, and its clumpy
structure which suggests that the cluster has likely not had sufficient time to
relax. Comparing our results for NGC346 with those derived for other star
clusters in the SMC and the Milky Way (MW), we conclude that, while the star
formation process might depend on the local cloud conditions, the IMF does not
seem to be affected by general environmental effects such as galaxy type,
metallicity, and dust content.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in A
Dynamical and chemical evolution of NGC1569
Blue Compact Dwarf and Dwarf Irregular galaxies are generally believed to be
unevolved objects, due to their blue colors, compact appearance and large gas
fractions. Many of these objects show an ongoing intense burst of star
formation or have experienced it in the recent past. By means of 2-D
hydrodynamical simulations, coupled with detailed chemical yields originating
from SNeII, SNeIa, and intermediate-mass stars, we study the dynamical and
chemical evolution of model galaxies with structural parameters similar to
NGC1569, a prototypical starburst galaxy. A burst of star formation with short
duration is not able to account for the chemical and morphological properties
of this galaxy. The best way to reproduce the chemical composition of this
object is by assuming long-lasting episodes of star formation and a more recent
burst, separated from the previous episodes by a short quiescent period. The
last burst of star formation, in most of the explored cases, does not affect
the chemical composition of the galaxy, since the enriched gas produced by
young stars is in a too hot phase to be detectable with the optical
spectroscopy. Models assuming the infall of a big cloud towards the center of
the galaxy reproduce the chemical composition of the NGC1569, but the pressure
exercised by the cloud hampers the expansion of the galactic wind, at variance
with what observed in NGC1569.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, A&A accepte
Gemini GMOS/IFU spectroscopy of NGC 1569 - II: Mapping the roots of the galactic outflow
We present a set of four Gemini-North GMOS/IFU observations of the central
disturbed regions of the dwarf irregular starburst galaxy NGC 1569, surrounding
the well-known super star clusters A and B. This continues on directly from a
companion paper, in which we describe the data reduction and analysis
techniques employed and present the analysis of one of the IFU pointings. By
decomposing the emission line profiles across the IFU fields, we map out the
properties of each individual component identified and identify a number of
relationships and correlations that allow us to investigate in detail the state
of the ionized ISM. Our observations support and expand on the main findings
from the analysis of the first IFU position, where we conclude that a broad (<
400 km/s) component underlying the bright nebular emission lines is produced in
a turbulent mixing layer on the surface of cool gas knots, set up by the impact
of the fast-flowing cluster winds. We discuss the kinematic, electron density
and excitation maps of each region in detail and compare our results to
previous studies. Our analysis reveals a very complex environment with many
overlapping and superimposed components, including dissolving gas knots,
rapidly expanding shocked shells and embedded ionizing sources, but no evidence
for organised bulk motions. We conclude that the four IFU positions presented
here lie well within the starburst region where energy is injected, and, from
the lack of substantial ordered gas flows, within the quasi-hydrostatic zone of
the wind interior to the sonic point. The net outflow occurs at radii beyond
100-200 pc, but our data imply that mass-loading of the hot ISM is active even
at the roots of the wind.Comment: 21 pages, 23 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Star formation in the small magellanic cloud: The youngest star clusters
AbstractWe recently launched a comprehensive ground based (ESO/VLT/NTT) and space (HST & SST) study of the present and past star formation in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), in clusters and in the field, with the goal of understanding how star and cluster formation occur and propagate in an environment of low metallicity, with a gas and dust content that is significantly lower than in the Milky Way. In this paper, we present some preliminary results of the "young cluster" program, where we acquired deep F555W (~V), and F814W (~I) HST/ACS images of the four young and massive SMC star clusters: NGC 346, NGC 602, NGC 299, and NGC 376
Infrared Narrow-Band Tomography of the Local Starburst NGC 1569 with LBT/LUCIFER
We used the near-IR imager/spectrograph LUCIFER mounted on the Large
Binocular Telescope (LBT) to image, with sub-arcsec seeing, the local dwarf
starburst NGC 1569 in the JHK bands and HeI 1.08 micron, [FeII] 1.64 micron and
Brgamma narrow-band filters. We obtained high-quality spatial maps of HeI,
[FeII] and Brgamma emission across the galaxy, and used them together with
HST/ACS images of NGC 1569 in the Halpha filter to derive the two-dimensional
spatial map of the dust extinction and surface star formation rate density. We
show that dust extinction is rather patchy and, on average, higher in the
North-West (NW) portion of the galaxy [E_g(B-V) = 0.71 mag] than in the
South-East [E_g(B-V) = 0.57 mag]. Similarly, the surface density of star
formation rate peaks in the NW region of NGC 1569, reaching a value of about 4
x 10^-6 M_sun yr^-1 pc^-2. The total star formation rate as estimated from the
integrated, dereddened Halpha luminosity is about 0.4 M_sun yr^-1, and the
total supernova rate from the integrated, dereddened [FeII] luminosity is about
0.005 yr^-1 (assuming a distance of 3.36 Mpc). The azimuthally averaged
[FeII]/Brgamma flux ratio is larger at the edges of the central, gas-deficient
cavities (encompassing the super star clusters A and B) and in the galaxy
outskirts. If we interpret this line ratio as the ratio between the average
past star formation (as traced by supernovae) and on-going activity
(represented by OB stars able to ionize the interstellar medium), it would then
indicate that star formation has been quenched within the central cavities and
lately triggered in a ring around them. The number of ionizing hydrogen and
helium photons as computed from the integrated, dereddened Halpha and HeI
luminosities suggests that the latest burst of star formation occurred about 4
Myr ago and produced new stars with a total mass of ~1.8 x 10^6 M_sun.
[Abridged]Comment: accepted for publication in A
The HELLAS2XMM survey. V. Near-Infrared observations of X-ray sources with extreme X/O ratios
We present the results of deep near-infrared observations of 11 hard X-ray
selected sources in the Hellas2XMM survey, with faint optical magnitude (R>24)
and high X-ray-to-optical flux ratio. All but one of the sources have been
detected in the Ks band, with bright counterparts (Ks<19) and red colors
(R-K>5), and therefore belong to the ERO population. A detailed analysis of the
surface brightness profiles allows us to classify all of the NIR counterparts.
There are 2 point-like objects, 7 elliptical galaxies and one source with a
disky profile. None of the extended sources shows any evidence for the presence
of a central unresolved object tracing the putative X-ray emitting AGN. Using
both the R-K colors and the morphological information, we have estimated for
all the sources a ``minimum photometric redshift'', ranging between 0.8 and
2.4; the elliptical hosts have zmin=0.9-1.4. We computed the X-ray properties
using these redshifts: most of the sources have NH>10^{22}, with unabsorbed
X-ray luminosities up to 10^{45}erg s^{-1}. These objects therefore belong to
the population of obscured (Type II) quasars and, from a statistical point of
view, they turn out to be a non-negligible fraction (~10%) of the most luminous
AGN. Selecting the high X/O sources for a follow-up study in the NIR is
therefore a powerful technique aimed at studying at high redshift the hosts of
Type II AGN. Overall, our results seem to indicate that the hosts are mostly
elliptical galaxies at z~1, and that these near-IR bright objects would be
among the most massive spheroids at these epochs.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. V2: minor typos
correcte
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