455 research outputs found
Reaffirming the connection between the Galactic stellar warp and the Canis Major overdensity
We perform a critical re-analysis and discussion of recent results presented
in the literature which interpret the CMa overdensity as the signature of an
accreting dwarf galaxy or a new substructure within the Galaxy. Several issues
are addressed. We show that arguments against the ``warp'' interpretation are
based on an erroneous perception of the Milky Way. There is nothing anomalous
with colour--magnitude diagrams on opposite sides of the average warp mid-plane
being different. We witnessed the rise and fall of the blue plume population,
first attributed to young stars in a disrupting dwarf galaxy and now discarded
as a normal disc population. Similarly, there is nothing anomalous in the outer
thin+thick disc metallicities being low (-1<[Fe/H]<-0.5), and spiral arms (as
part of the thin disc) should, and do, warp. Most importantly, we show
unambiguously that, contrary to previous claims, the warp produces a stellar
overdensity that is distance-compatible with that observed in CMa.The CMa
over-density remains fully accounted for in a first order approach by Galactic
models without new substructures. Given the intrinsic uncertainties (concerning
the properties of the warp, flare and disc cutoff, the role of extinction and
degeneracy), minor deviations with respect to these models are not enough to
support the hypothesis of an accreted dwarf galaxy or new substructure within
the Milky Way disc.Comment: A&A Letter, accepted, 4 pages, 3 figure
NTT infrared imaging of star cluster candidates towards the central parts of the Galaxy
We address the issue whether the central parts of the Galaxy harbour young
clusters other than Arches, Quintuplet and the Nuclear Young Cluster. A large
sample of centrally projected cluster candidates has been recently identified
from the 2MASS J, H and Ks Atlas. We provide a catalogue of higher angular
resolution and deeper images for 57 2MASS cluster candidates, obtained with the
near-IR camera SOFI at the ESO NTT telescope. We classify 10 objects as star
clusters, some of them deeply embedded in gas and/or dust clouds. Three other
objects are probably star clusters, although the presence of dust in the field
does not exclude the possibility of their being field stars seen through
low-absorption regions. Eleven objects are concentrations of stars in areas of
little or no gas, and are classified as dissolving cluster candidates. Finally,
31 objects turned out to be the blend of a few bright stars, not resolved as
such in the low resolution 2MASS images. By combining the above results with
other known objects we provide an updated sample of 42 embedded clusters and
candidates projected within 7 degrees. As a first step we study Object 11 of
Dutra & Bica (2000) projected at approximately 1 degree from the nucleus. We
present H and Ks photometry and study the colour-magnitude diagram and
luminosity function. Object 11 appears to be a less massive cluster than Arches
or Quintuplet, and it is located at a distance from the Sun d=8 kpc, with a
visual absorption Av=15.Comment: accepted to A&A, 9 pages, 10 figure
Spectroscopy of horizontal branch stars in Omega Centauri
We analyze the reddening, surface helium abundance and mass of 115 horizontal
branch (HB) and blue hook (BH) stars in OmegaCentauri, spanning the HB from the
blue edge of the instability strip to Teff~50000K. The mean cluster reddening
is E(B-V)=0.115+-0.004, in good agreement with previous estimates, but we
evidence a pattern of differential reddening in the cluster area. The stars in
the western half are more reddened than in the southwest quadrant by 0.03-0.04
magnitudes. We find that the helium abundances measured on low-resolution
spectra are systematically lower by ~0.25 dex than the measurements based on
higher resolution. No difference in helium abundance is detected between
OmegaCentauri and three comparison clusters, and the stars in the range
11500-20000K follow a trend with temperature, which probably reflects a
variable efficiency of the diffusion processes. There is mild evidence that two
families of extreme HB (EHB) stars (Teff>20000K) could exist, as observed in
the field, with ~15% of the objects being helium depleted by a factor of ten
with respect to the main population. The distribution of helium abundance above
30000K is bimodal, but we detect a fraction of He-poor objects lower than
previous investigations. The observations are consistent with these being stars
evolving off the HB. Their spatial distribution is not uniform, but this
asymmetric distribution is only marginally significative. We also find that EHB
stars with anomalously high spectroscopic mass could be present in
OmegaCentauri, as previously found in other clusters. The derived
temperature-color relation reveals that stars hotter than 11000K are fainter
than the expectations of the canonical models in the U band, while no anomaly
is detected in B and V. This behavior, not observed in NGC6752, is a new
peculiarity of OmegaCentauri HB stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
A study of the Galactic plane towards l = 305°
We present optical (UBVIC) observations of a rich and complex field in the Galactic plane towards l ∼ 305° and b ∼ 0°. Our analysis reveals a significantly high interstellar absorption (AV ∼ 10) and an abnormal extinction law in this line of sight. Availing a considerable number of colour combinations, the photometric diagrams allow us to derive new estimates of the fundamental parameters of the two open clusters Danks 1 and Danks 2. Due to the derived abnormal reddening law in this line of sight, both clusters appear much closer (to the Sun) than previously thought. Additionally, we present the optical colours and magnitudes of the WR 48a star, and its main parameters were estimated. The properties of the two embedded clusters, DBS2003 130 and 131, are also addressed. We identify a number of young stellar objects which are probable members of these clusters. This new material is then used to revisit the spiral structure in this sector of the Galaxy showing evidence of populations associated with the inner Galaxy Scutum-Crux arm.Instituto de Astrofísica de La PlataFacultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísica
A hot horizontal branch star with a close K-type main-sequence companion
Dynamical interactions in binary systems are thought to play a major role in
the formation of extreme horizontal branch stars (EHBs) in the Galactic field.
However, it is still unclear if the same mechanisms are at work in globular
clusters, where EHBs are predominantly single stars. Here we report on the
discovery of a unique close binary system (period ~1.61 days) in the globular
cluster NGC6752, comprising an EHB and a main-sequence companion of 0.63+-0.05
Msun. Such a system has no counterpart among nearly two hundred known EHB
binaries in the Galactic field. Its discovery suggests that either field
studies are incomplete, missing this type of systems possibly because of
selection effects, or that a particular EHB formation mechanism is active in
clusters but not in the field
Spectroscopic search for binaries among EHB stars in globular clusters
We performed a spectroscopic search for binaries among hot Horizontal Branch
stars in globular clusters. We present final results for a sample of 51 stars
in NGC6752, and preliminary results for the first 15 stars analyzed in M80. The
observed stars are distributed along all the HBs in the range 8000 < Teff <
32000 K, and have been observed during four nights. Radial velocity variations
have been measured with the cross-correlation technique. We carefully analyzed
the statistical and systematic errors associated with the measurements in order
to evaluate the statistical significance of the observed variations. No close
binary system has been detected, neither among cooler stars nor among the
sample of hot EHB stars (18 stars with Teff > 22000 K in NGC6752). The data
corrected for instrumental effects indicate that the radial velocity variations
are always below the 3sigma level of ~15 km/s. These results are in sharp
contrast with those found for field hot subdwarfs, and open new questions about
the formation of EHB stars in globular clusters, and possibly of the field
subdwarfs.Comment: To appear in Baltic Astronomy. Proceedings of the 2nd meeting on Hot
Subdwarf Stars, La Palma, June 2005. 4 pages, 2 figure
Outer structure of the Galactic warp and flare: explaining the Canis Major over-density
(Abridged) We derive the structure of the Galactic stellar Warp and Flare
using 2MASS RC and RGB stars, selected at mean heliocentric distances of 3, 7
and 17 kpc.
Our results are: (i) a clear stellar warp signature is derived for the 3
selected rings; (ii) the derived stellar warp is consistent (both in amplitude
and phase-angle) with that for the Galactic interstellar dust and HI gas; (iii)
the Sun seems not to fall on the line of nodes. The stellar warp phase-angle
orientation (+15 degrees) is close to the orientation angle of the Galactic bar
and this produces an asymmetric warp for the inner rings; (iv) a
Northern/Southern warp symmetry is observed only for the ring at 17 kpc; (v)
treating a mixture of thin and thick disk populations we trace the disk flaring
and derive a constant scale-height (~0.65 kpc) within R(GC)~15 kpc. Further
out, the disk flaring increase gradually reaching a mean scale-height of ~1.5
kpc at R(GC)~23 kpc; and (vi) these results provide further robust evidence
that there is no disk radial truncation at R(GC)~14 kpc.
In the particular case of the Canis Major over-density we confirm its
coincidence with the Southern stellar maximum warp occurring near l=240. We
present evidence to conclude that all observed parameters (e.g. number density,
radial velocities, proper motion etc) of CMa are consistent with it being a
normal Milky Way outer-disk population, thereby leaving no justification for a
more complex interpretations of its origin. The present analysis does not
provide a conclusive test of the structure or origin of the Monoceros Ring.
Nevertheless, we show that a warped flared Milky Way contributes significantly
at the locations of the Monoceros Ring.Comment: 25 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. A higher
resolution pdf file is available at
http://wwwuser.oat.ts.astro.it/zaggia/public_html/warp
Abundance anomalies in hot horizontal branch stars of the Galactic globular cluster NGC 2808
Astronomy and Astrophysics, 452, pp. 493-501, http://dx.doi.org./10.1051/0004-6361:20054593International audienc
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