220 research outputs found
Deep SDSS optical spectroscopy of distant halo stars II. Iron, calcium, and magnesium abundances
We analyze a sample of 3,944 low-resolution (R ~ 2000) optical spectra from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), focusing on stars with effective
temperatures 5800 < Teff < 6300 K, and distances from the Milky Way plane in
excess of 5 kpc, and determine their abundances of Fe, Ca, and Mg. We followed
the same methodology as in the previous paper in this series, deriving
atmospheric parameters by chi2 minimization, but this time we obtained the
abundances of individual elements by fitting their associated spectral lines.
Distances were calculated from absolute magnitudes obtained by a statistical
comparison of our stellar parameters with stellar-evolution models. The
observations reveal a decrease in the abundances of iron, calcium, and
magnesium at large distances from the Galactic center. The median abundances
for the halo stars analyzed are fairly constant up to a Galactocentric distance
r ~ 20 kpc, rapidly decrease between r ~ 20 and r ~ 40 kpc, and flatten out to
significantly lower values at larger distances, consistent with previous
studies. In addition, we examine the [Ca/Fe] and [Mg/Fe] as a function of Fe/H
and Galactocentric distance. Our results show that the most distant parts of
the halo show a steeper variation of the [Ca/Fe] and [Mg/Fe] with iron. We
found that at the range -1.6 < [Fe/H] < -0.4 [Ca/Fe] decreases with distance,
in agreement with earlier results based on local stars. However, the opposite
trend is apparent for [Mg/Fe]. Our conclusion that the outer regions of the
halo are more metal-poor than the inner regions, based on in situ observations
of distant stars, agrees with recent results based on inferences from the
kinematics of more local stars, and with predictions of recent galaxy formation
simulations for galaxies similar to the Milky Way
Additional Ultracool White Dwarfs Found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We identify seven new ultracool white dwarfs discovered in the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS). The SDSS photometry, spectra, and proper motions are
presented, and additional BVRI data are given for these and other previously
discovered ultracool white dwarfs. The observed colors span a remarkably wide
range, qualitatively similar to colors predicted by models for very cool white
dwarfs. One of the new stars (SDSS J1251+44) exhibits strong collision-induced
absorption (CIA) in its spectra, while the spectra and colors of the other six
are consistent with mild CIA. Another of the new discoveries (SDSS J2239+00A)
is part of a binary system -- its companion is also a cool white dwarf, and
other data indicate that the companion exhibits an infrared flux deficiency,
making this the first binary system composed of two CIA white dwarfs. A third
discovery (SDSS J0310-00) has weak Balmer emission lines. The proper motions of
all seven stars are consistent with membership in the disk or thick disk.Comment: Accepted for Astrophysical Journal. 16 pages (includes 3 figures
Deep SDSS optical spectroscopy of distant halo stars I. Atmospheric parameters and stellar metallicity distribution
We analyze a sample of tens of thousands of spectra of halo turnoff stars,
obtained with the optical spectrographs of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS),
to characterize the stellar halo population "in situ" out to a distance of a
few tens of kpc from the Sun. In this paper we describe the derivation of
atmospheric parameters. We also derive the overall stellar metallicity
distribution based on F-type stars observed as flux calibrators for the
Baryonic Oscillations Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). Our analysis is based on an
automated method that determines the set of parameters of a model atmosphere
that reproduces each observed spectrum best. We used an optimization algorithm
and evaluate model fluxes by means of interpolation in a precomputed grid. In
our analysis, we account for the spectrograph's varying resolution as a
function of fiber and wavelength. Our results for early SDSS (pre-BOSS upgrade)
data compare well with those from the SEGUE Stellar Parameter Pipeline (SSPP),
except for stars with logg (cgs units) lower than 2.5. An analysis of stars in
the globular cluster M13 reveals a dependence of the inferred metallicity on
surface gravity for stars with logg < 2.5, confirming the systematics
identified in the comparison with the SSPP. We find that our metallicity
estimates are significantly more precise than the SSPP results. We obtain a
halo metallicity distribution that is narrower and more asymmetric than in
previous studies. The lowest gravity stars in our sample, at tens of kpc from
the Sun, indicate a shift of the metallicity distribution to lower abundances,
consistent with what is expected from a dual halo system in the Milky Way.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Table 1 includes model ugriz magnitudes for
stars with different atmospheric parameters in electronic forma
Optically Selected BL Lacertae Candidates from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release Seven
We present a sample of 723 optically selected BL Lac candidates from the SDSS
DR7 spectroscopic database encompassing 8250 deg^2 of sky; our sample
constitutes one of the largest uniform BL Lac samples yet derived. Each BL Lac
candidate has a high-quality SDSS spectrum from which we determine
spectroscopic redshifts for ~60% of the objects. Redshift lower limits are
estimated for the remaining objects utilizing the lack of host galaxy flux
contamination in their optical spectra; we find that objects lacking
spectroscopic redshifts are likely at systematically higher redshifts.
Approximately 80% of our BL Lac candidates match to a radio source in
FIRST/NVSS, and ~40% match to a ROSAT X-ray source. The homogeneous
multiwavelength coverage allows subdivision of the sample into 637 radio-loud
BL Lac candidates and 86 weak-featured radio-quiet objects. The radio-loud
objects broadly support the standard paradigm unifying BL Lac objects with
beamed radio galaxies. We propose that the majority of the radio-quiet objects
may be lower-redshift (z<2.2) analogs to high-redshift weak line quasars (i.e.,
AGN with unusually anemic broad emission line regions). These would constitute
the largest sample of such objects, being of similar size and complementary in
redshift to the samples of high-redshift weak line quasars previously
discovered by the SDSS. However, some fraction of the weak-featured radio-quiet
objects may instead populate a rare and extreme radio-weak tail of the much
larger radio-loud BL Lac population. Serendipitous discoveries of unusual white
dwarfs, high-redshift weak line quasars, and broad absorption line quasars with
extreme continuum dropoffs blueward of rest-frame 2800 Angstroms are also
briefly described.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables. Accepted for publication in A
Light and Motion in SDSS Stripe 82: The Catalogues
We present a new public archive of light-motion curves in Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS) Stripe 82, covering 99 deg in right ascension from RA = 20.7 h to
3.3 h and spanning 2.52 deg in declination from Dec = -1.26 to 1.26 deg, for a
total sky area of ~249 sq deg. Stripe 82 has been repeatedly monitored in the
u, g, r, i and z bands over a seven-year baseline. Objects are cross-matched
between runs, taking into account the effects of any proper motion. The
resulting catalogue contains almost 4 million light-motion curves of stellar
objects and galaxies. The photometry are recalibrated to correct for varying
photometric zeropoints, achieving ~20 mmag and ~30 mmag root-mean-square (RMS)
accuracy down to 18 mag in the g, r, i and z bands for point sources and
extended sources, respectively. The astrometry are recalibrated to correct for
inherent systematic errors in the SDSS astrometric solutions, achieving ~32 mas
and ~35 mas RMS accuracy down to 18 mag for point sources and extended sources,
respectively.
For each light-motion curve, 229 photometric and astrometric quantities are
derived and stored in a higher-level catalogue. On the photometric side, these
include mean exponential and PSF magnitudes along with uncertainties, RMS
scatter, chi^2 per degree of freedom, various magnitude distribution
percentiles, object type (stellar or galaxy), and eclipse, Stetson and Vidrih
variability indices. On the astrometric side, these quantities include mean
positions, proper motions as well as their uncertainties and chi^2 per degree
of freedom. The here presented light-motion curve catalogue is complete down to
r~21.5 and is at present the deepest large-area photometric and astrometric
variability catalogue available.Comment: MNRAS accepte
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