127 research outputs found
Reply to comment by Fries on â Cometary origin of atmospheric methane variations on Mars unlikelyâ
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137383/1/jgre20652_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137383/2/jgre20652.pd
Empirical modeling of the stellar spectrum of galaxies
An empirical method of modeling the stellar spectrum of galaxies is proposed,
based on two successive applications of Principal Component Analysis (PCA). PCA
is first applied to the newly available stellar library STELIB, supplemented by
the J, H and K magnitudes taken mainly from the 2 Micron All Sky Survey
(2MASS). Next the resultant eigen-spectra are used to fit the observed spectra
of a sample of 1016 galaxies selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data
Release One (SDSS DR1). PCA is again applied, to the fitted spectra to
construct the eigen-spectra of galaxies with zero velocity dispersion. The
first 9 galactic eigen-spectra so obtained are then used to model the stellar
spectrum of the galaxies in SDSS DR1, and synchronously to estimate the stellar
velocity dispersion, the spectral type, the near-infrared SED, and the average
reddening. Extensive tests show that the spectra of different type galaxies can
be modeled quite accurately using these eigen-spectra. The method can yield
stellar velocity dispersion with accuracies better than 10%, for the spectra of
typical S/N ratios in SDSS DR1.Comment: 34 pages with 18 figures, submitted to A
Constraining the solutions of an inverse method of stellar population synthesis
In three previous papers (Pelat 1997, 1998 and Moultaka & Pelat 2000), we set
out an inverse stellar population synthesis method which uses a database of
stellar spectra. Unlike other methods, this one provides a full knowledge of
all possible solutions as well as a good estimation of their stability;
moreover, it provides the unique approximate solution, when the problem is
overdetermined, using a rigorous minimization procedure. In Boisson et al.
(2000), this method has been applied to 10 active and 2 normal galaxies. In
this paper we analyse the results of the method after constraining the
solutions. Adding {\it a priori} physical conditions on the solutions
constitutes a good way to regularize the synthesis problem. As an illustration
we introduce physical constraints on the relative number of stars taking into
account our present knowledge of the initial mass function in galaxies. In
order to avoid biases on the solutions due to such constraints, we use
constraints involving only inequalities between the number of stars, after
dividing the H-R diagram into various groups of stellar masses. We discuss the
results for a well-known globular cluster of the galaxy M31 and discuss some of
the galaxies studied in Boisson et al. (2000). We find that, given the spectral
resolution and the spectral domain, the method is very stable according to such
constraints (i.e. the constrained solutions are almost the same as the
unconstrained one). However, an additional information can be derived about the
evolutionary stage of the last burst of star formation, but the precise age of
this particular burst seems to be questionable.Comment: Accepted in A&A. 15 pages, 5 figures and 6 table
Cl 1103.7-1245 at z=0.96: the highest redshift galaxy cluster in the EDisCS survey
We present new spectroscopic observations in a field containing the highest
redshift cluster of the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS). We measure galaxy
redshifts and determine the velocity dispersions of the galaxy structures
located in this field. Together with the main cluster Cl1103.71245
(z=0.9580; sigma_{clus} = 522 +/- 111 km/s) we find a secondary structure at
z=0.9830, Cl1103.7-1245c. We then characterize the galaxy properties in both
systems, and find that they contain very different galaxy populations. The
cluster Cl1103.7-1245 hosts a mixture of passive elliptical galaxies and
star-forming spirals and irregulars. In the secondary structure Cl1103.7-1245c
all galaxies are lower-mass star-forming irregulars and peculiars. In addition,
we compare the galaxy populations in the Cl1103.7-1245 z=0.9580 cluster with
those in lower redshift EDisCS clusters with similar velocity dispersions. We
find that the properties of the galaxies in Cl1103.7-1245 follow the
evolutionary trends found at lower redshifts: the number of cluster members
increases with time in line with the expected growth in cluster mass, and the
fraction of passive early-type galaxies increases with time while star-forming
late types become less dominant. Finally, we find that the mean stellar masses
are similar in all clusters, suggesting that massive cluster galaxies were
already present at z~1.Comment: A&A in pres
The intermediate-redshift galaxy cluster CL 0048-2942. Stellar populations
We present a detailed study of the cluster CL 0048-2942, located at z~0.64,
based on a photometric and spectroscopic catalogue of 54 galaxies in a 5 x 5
square arcmin region centred in that cluster. Of these, 23 galaxies were found
to belong to the cluster. Based on this sample, the line-of-sight velocity
dispersion of the cluster is approximately 680 +- 140 km/s. We have performed
stellar population synthesis in the cluster members as well as in the field
galaxies of the sample and found that there are population gradients in the
cluster with central galaxies hosting mainly intermediate/old populations
whereas galaxies in the cluster outskirts show clearly an increase of younger
populations, meaning that star formation is predominantly taking place in the
outer regions of the cluster. In a general way, field galaxies seem to host
less evolved stellar populations than cluster members. In fact, in terms of
ages, young supergiant stars dominate the spectra of field galaxies whereas
cluster galaxies display a dominant number of old and intermediate age stars.
Following the work of other authors (e.g. Dressler et al. 1999) we have
estimated the percentage of K+A galaxies in our sample and found around 13% in
the cluster and 10% in the field. These values were estimated through means of
a new method, based on stellar population synthesis results, that takes into
account all possible absorption features in the spectrum and thus makes optimal
use of the data.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics. 24 pages, 10 figures, 10 tables
(figures 3, 4, 5 and tables 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 will be available in
electronic format only in the A&A published version
Zonal winds at high latitudes on Venus: An improved application of cyclostrophic balance to Venus Express observations
Recent retrievals of zonal thermal winds obtained in a cyclostrophic regime on Venus are generally consistent with cloud tracking measurements at mid-latitudes, but become unphysical in polar regions where the values obtained above the clouds are often less than or close to zero. Using a global atmospheric model, we show that the main source of errors that appear in the polar regions when retrieving the zonal thermal winds is most likely due to uncertainties in the zonal wind intensity in the choice of the lower boundary condition.
Here we suggest a new and robust method to better estimate the lower boundary condition for high latitudes, thereby improving the retrieved zonal thermal winds throughout the high latitudes middle atmosphere. This new method is applied to temperature fields derived from Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) data on board the Venus Express spacecraft. We obtain a zonal thermal wind field that is in better agreement with other, more direct methods based on either retrieving the zonal winds from cloud tracking or from direct measurements of the meridional slope of pressure surfaces
Prospects for population synthesis in the H band: NeMo grids of stellar atmospheres compared to observations
For applications in population synthesis, libraries of theoretical stellar
spectra are often considered an alternative to template libraries of observed
spectra, because they allow a complete sampling of stellar parameters. Most
attention in published theoretical spectral libraries has been devoted to the
visual wavelength range. We present a detailed comparison of theoretical
spectra in the range 1.57-1.67m, for spectral types from A to early M and
for giants and dwarf stars, with observed stellar spectra at resolutions around
3000, which would be sufficient to disentangle the different groups of late
type stars. We have selected the NeMo grids of stellar atmospheres to perform
such a comparison. We first demonstrate that after combining atomic and
molecular line lists, it is possible to match observed spectral flux
distributions with theoretical ones very well for almost the entire parameter
range covered by the NeMo grids at moderate resolution in the visual range. In
the infrared range, although the overall shape of the observed flux
distributions is still matched reasonably well, the individual spectral
features are reproduced by the theoretical spectra only for stars earlier than
mid F type. For later spectral types the differences increase and theoretical
spectra of K type stars have systematically weaker line features than those
found in observations. These discrepancies are traced back to stem primarily
from incomplete data on neutral atomic lines, although some of them are also
related to molecules. Improving atomic data in the near infrared is a key
element in making the construction of reliable libraries of stellar spectra in
the infrared feasible.Comment: 17 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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