2,533 research outputs found

    Comparison between Observed and Theoretical Red Giant Branch Luminosity Functions of Galactic Globular Clusters

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    V-band luminosity functions have been obtained for the upper main-sequence, sub-giant branch and red giant branch of 18 galactic globular clusters from HST data. A comparison with four sets of theoretical models has been performed. In contrast with what was found in several previous works, a Good general agreement has been found between the observed and theoretical LF at any metallicity [M/H]<-0.7. Possible discrepancies at higher metallicity, in the upper part of the RGB, need to be confirmed with further observational data and by extending all the models to the most metal rich regime. The SGB shape has been used to set an upper limit to the cluster age, and consequently a lower limit on the cluster distance. A discussion on the still open problem of the mismatch between the observed and theoretical RGB bump location is also presented.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

    The Initial Helium Abundance of the Galactic Globular Cluster System

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    We estimate the initial He content in about 30% of the Galactic globular clusters (GGCs) from new star counts we have performed on the recently published HST snapshot database of Colour Magnitude Diagrams (Piotto et al. 2002). More in detail, we use the so-called RR-parameter and estimate the He content from a calibration based on a recently updated set of stellar models. We performed an accurate statistical analysis in order to assess whether GGCs show a statistically significant spread in their initial He abundances, and whether there is a correlation with the metallicity. We do not find any significant dependence of the He abundance on the GC metallicity; this provides an important constraint for models of Galaxy formation and evolution. Apart from GGCs with the bluest HB morphology, the observed spread in the individual He abundances is statistically compatible with the individual errors. This means that either there is no intrinsic He spread among the GGCs, or that this is masked by the errors. In the latter case we have estimated a firm 1σ\sigma upper limit of 0.019 to the possible intrinsic spread. In case of the GGCs with the bluest HB morphology we detect a significant spread towards higher abundances inconsistent with the individual errors. In the hypothesis that the intrinsic dispersion on the individual He abundances is zero, taking into account the errors on the individual R-parameter estimates, as well as the uncertainties on the GGC [M/H] scale and theoretical calibration, we have determined an initial He abundance Y(GGC)=0.250\pm0.006 a value in perfect agreement with current estimates based on CMB radiation analyses and cosmological nucleosynthesis computations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, in press on Astronomy & Astrophysic

    The Luminosity and Mass Function of the Globular Cluster NGC1261

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    I-band CCD images of two large regions of the Galactic globular cluster NGC 1261 have been used to construct stellar luminosity functions (LF) for 14000 stars in three annuli from 1.4' from the cluster center to the tidal radius. The LFs extend to M_I~8 and tend to steepen from the inner to the outer annulus, in agreement with the predictions of the multimass King-Michie model that we have calculated for this cluster. The LFs have been transformed into mass functions. Once corrected for mass segregation the global mass function of NGC 1261 has a slope x_0=0.8+/-0.5Comment: 9 pages, A&A macros, accepted for publication in A&

    A PSF-based approach to Kepler/K2 data. I. Variability within the K2 Campaign 0 star clusters M 35 and NGC 2158

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    Kepler and K2 data analysis reported in the literature is mostly based on aperture photometry. Because of Kepler's large, undersampled pixels and the presence of nearby sources, aperture photometry is not always the ideal way to obtain high-precision photometry and, because of this, the data set has not been fully exploited so far. We present a new method that builds on our experience with undersampled HST images. The method involves a point-spread function (PSF) neighbour-subtraction and was specifically developed to exploit the huge potential offered by the K2 "super-stamps" covering the core of dense star clusters. Our test-bed targets were the NGC 2158 and M 35 regions observed during the K2 Campaign 0. We present our PSF modeling and demonstrate that, by using a high-angular-resolution input star list from the Asiago Schmidt telescope as the basis for PSF neighbour subtraction, we are able to reach magnitudes as faint as Kp~24 with a photometric precision of 10% over 6.5 hours, even in the densest regions. At the bright end, our photometric precision reaches ~30 parts-per-million. Our method leads to a considerable level of improvement at the faint magnitudes (Kp>15.5) with respect to the classical aperture photometry. This improvement is more significant in crowded regions. We also extracted raw light curves of ~60,000 stars and detrended them for systematic effects induced by spacecraft motion and other artifacts that harms K2 photometric precision. We present a list of 2133 variables.Comment: 27 pages (included appendix), 2 tables, 25 figures (5 in low resolution). Accepted for publication in MNRAS on November 05, 2015. Online materials will be available on the Journal website soo

    Galactic Globular Clusters as a test for Very Low-Mass stellar models

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    We make use of the Next Generation model atmospheres by Allard et al. (1997) and Hauschildt, Allard & Baron (1999) to compute theoretical models for low and very low-mass stars for selected metallicities in the range Z= 0.0002 to 0.002. On this basis, we present theoretical predictions covering the sequence of H-burning stars as observed in galactic globulars from the faint end of the Main Sequence up to, and beyond, the cluster Turn Off. The role played by the new model atmospheres is discussed, showing that present models appear in excellent agreement with models by Baraffe et al. (1997) as computed on quite similar physical basis. One finds that the theoretical mass-luminosity relations based on this updated set of models, are in good agreement with the empirical data provided by Henry & McCarthy (1993). Comparison with HST observation discloses that the location in the Color-Magnitude diagram of the lower Main Sequence in galactic globular clusters appears again in good agreement with the predicted sensitive dependence of these sequences on the cluster metallicity.Comment: accepted for pubblication on MNRA

    The helium spread in the Globular cluster 47 Tuc

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    Spectroscopy has shown the presence of the CN band dicothomy and the Na-O anticorrelations for 50--70% of the investigated samples in the cluster 47 Tuc, otherwise considered a "normal" prototype of high metallicity clusters from the photometric analysis. Very recently, the re-analysis of a large number of archival HST data of the cluster core has been able to put into evidence the presence of structures in the Sub Giant Branch: it has a brighter component with a spread in magnitude by ∌\sim0.06 mag and a second one, made of about 10% of stars, a little fainter (by ∌\sim0.05 mag). These data also show that the Main Sequence of the cluster has an intrinsic spread in color which, if interpreted as due to a small spread in helium abundance, suggests Δ\DeltaY∌\sim0.027. In this work we examine in detail whether the Horizontal Branch morphology and the Sub Giant structure provide further independent indications that a real --although very small-helium spread is present in the cluster. We re--analyze the HST archival data for the Horizontal Branch of 47 Tuc, obtaining a sample of ∌\sim500 stars with very small photometric errors, and build population synthesis based on new models to show that its particular morphology can be better explained by taking into account a spread in helium abundance of 2% in mass. The same variation in helium is able to explain the spread in luminosity of the Sub Giant Branch, while a small part of the second generation is characterized by a small C+N+O increase and provides an explanation for the fainter Sub Giant Branch. We conclude that three photometric features concur to form the paradigm that a small but real helium spread is present in a cluster that has no spectacular evidence for multiple populations like those shown by other massive clusters.Comment: Accepted for publication in the MNRAS on 2010 June 8. Received 2010 May 19; in original form 2010 February 9. 7 pages and 3 figures. No table

    Accurate Internal Proper Motions of Globular Clusters

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    We have undertaken a long term program to measure high precision proper motions of nearby Galactic globular cluster (GC) stars using multi-epoch observations with the WFPC2 and the ACS cameras on-board the Hubble Space Telescope. The proper motions are used to study the internal cluster kinematics, and to obtain accurate cluster distances. In this paper, we also show how the proper motions of the field stars projected in the direction of the studied clusters can be used to set constraints on the Galaxy kinematics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, A.S.P. Conf. Ser., in press in Vol. 296, 200

    The blue sky of GJ3470b: the atmosphere of a low-mass planet unveiled by ground-based photometry

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    GJ3470b is a rare example of a "hot Uranus" transiting exoplanet orbiting a nearby M1.5 dwarf. It is of crucial interest for atmospheric studies because it is one of the most inflated low-mass planets known, bridging the boundary between "super-Earths" and Neptunian planets. We present two new ground-based light curves of GJ3470b gathered by the LBC camera at the Large Binocular Telescope. Simultaneous photometry in the ultraviolet (lambda_c = 357.5 nm) and optical infrared (lambda_c = 963.5 nm) allowed us to detect a significant change of the effective radius of GJ3470b as a function of wavelength. This can be interpreted as a signature of scattering processes occurring in the planetary atmosphere, which should be cloud-free and with a low mean molecular weight. The unprecedented accuracy of our measurements demonstrates that the photometric detection of Earth-sized planets around M dwarfs is achievable using 8-10m size ground-based telescopes. We provide updated planetary parameters, and a greatly improved orbital ephemeris for any forthcoming study of this planet.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in A&
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