3,456 research outputs found
The lithium isotope ratio in the metal-poor halo star G271-162 from VLT/UVES observations
A high resolution (R = 110.000), very high S/N (>600) spectrum of the
metal-poor turnoff star G271-162 has been obtained in connection with the
commissioning of UVES at VLT/Kueyen. Using both 1D hydrostatic and 3D
hydrodynamical model atmospheres, the lithium isotope ratio has been estimated
from the LiI 670.8 nm line by means of spectral synthesis. The necessary
stellar line broadening (1D: macroturbulence + rotation, 3D: rotation) has been
determined from unblended KI, CaI and FeI lines. The 3D line profiles agree
very well with the observed profiles, including the characteristic line
asymmetries. Both the 1D and 3D analyses reveal a possible detection of 6Li in
G271-162, 6Li/7Li = 0.02 +-0.01 (one sigma). It is discussed if the smaller
amount of 6Li in G271-162 than in the similar halo star HD84937 could be due to
differences in stellar mass and/or metallicity or whether it may reflect an
intrinsic scatter of the Li isotope ratio in the ISM at a given metallicity.Comment: 5 pages with 6 figures. Accepted as a letter in A&
The First Galaxies: Clues from Element Abundances
It has recently become possible to measure directly the abundances of several
chemical elements in a variety of environments at redshifts up to z = 5. In
this review I summarise the latest observations of Lyman break galaxies, damped
Lyman alpha systems and the Lyman alpha forest with a view to uncovering any
clues which these data may offer to the first episodes of star formation. The
picture which is emerging is one where the universe at z = 3 already included
many of the components of today's galaxies--even at these early times we see
evidence for Populations I and II stars, while the `smoking gun' for Population
III objects may be hidden in the chemical composition of the lowest density
regions of the IGM, yet to be deciphered.Comment: 15 pages, LaTex, 8 Postscript Figures. To appear in the Philosophical
Transactions of The Royal Society, Series
Carbon and oxygen in metal-poor halo stars
Carbon and oxygen are key tracers of the Galactic chemical evolution; in
particular, a reported upturn in [C/O] towards decreasing [O/H] in metal-poor
halo stars could be a signature of nucleosynthesis by massive Population III
stars. We reanalyse carbon, oxygen, and iron abundances in thirty-nine
metal-poor turn-off stars. For the first time, we take into account
three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamic effects together with departures from local
thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) when determining both the stellar parameters
and the elemental abundances, by deriving effective temperatures from 3D
non-LTE H profiles, surface gravities from Gaia parallaxes, iron
abundances from 3D LTE Feii equivalent widths, and carbon and oxygen abundances
from 3D non-LTE Ci and Oi equivalent widths. We find that [C/Fe] stays flat
with [Fe/H], whereas [O/Fe] increases linearly up to dex with decreasing
[Fe/H] down to dex. As such [C/O] monotonically decreases towards
decreasing [O/H], in contrast to previous findings, mainly by virtue of less
severe non-LTE effects for Oi at low [Fe/H] with our improved calculations.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; published in A&A Letter
Absolute Magnitude Calibration for Giants based on the Colour-Magnitude Diagrams of Galactic Clusters. II-Calibration with SDSS
We present an absolute magnitude calibration for red giants with the colour
magnitude diagrams of six Galactic clusters with different metallicities i.e.
M92, M13, M3, M71, NGC 6791 and NGC 2158. The combination of the absolute
magnitudes of the red giant sequences with the corresponding metallicities
provides calibration for absolute magnitude estimation for red giants for a
given colour. The calibration is defined in the colour interval
0.45 1.30 mag and it covers the metallicity interval
+0.37 dex. The absolute magnitude
residuals obtained by the application of the procedure to another set of
Galactic clusters lie in the interval mag.
However, the range of 94% of the residuals is shorter,
mag. The mean and the standard deviation of (all) residuals are 0.169 and 0.140
mag, respectively. The derived relations are applicable to stars older than 2
Gyr, the age of the youngest calibrating cluster.Comment: 12 pages, including 5 figures and 10 tables, accepted for publication
in PASA. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1204.429
3D non-LTE iron abundances in FG-type dwarfs
Spectroscopic measurements of iron abundances are prone to systematic
modelling errors. We present 3D non-LTE calculations across 32 STAGGER-grid
models with effective temperatures from 5000 K to 6500 K, surface gravities of
4.0 dex and 4.5 dex, and metallicities from 3 dex to 0 dex, and study the
effects on 171 Fe I and 12 Fe II optical lines. In warm metal-poor stars, the
3D non-LTE abundances are up to 0.5 dex larger than 1D LTE abundances inferred
from Fe I lines of intermediate excitation potential. In contrast, the 3D
non-LTE abundances can be 0.2 dex smaller in cool metal-poor stars when using
Fe I lines of low excitation potential. The corresponding abundance differences
between 3D non-LTE and 1D non-LTE are generally less severe but can still reach
0.2 dex. For Fe II lines the 3D abundances range from up to 0.15 dex
larger, to 0.10 dex smaller, than 1D abundances, with negligible departures
from 3D LTE except for the warmest stars at the lowest metallicities. The
results were used to correct 1D LTE abundances of the Sun and Procyon (HD
61421), and of the metal-poor stars HD 84937 and HD 140283, using an
interpolation routine based on neural networks. The 3D non-LTE models achieve
an improved ionisation balance in all four stars. In the two metal-poor stars,
they remove excitation imbalances that amount to 250 K to 300 K errors in
effective temperature. For Procyon, the 3D non-LTE models suggest [Fe/H] = 0.11
0.03, which is significantly larger than literature values based on
simpler models. We make the 3D non-LTE interpolation routine for FG-type dwarfs
publicly available, in addition to 1D non-LTE departure coefficients for
standard MARCS models of FGKM-type dwarfs and giants. These tools, together
with an extended 3D LTE grid for Fe II from 2019, can help improve the accuracy
of stellar parameter and iron abundance determinations for late-type stars.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables; arXiv abstract abridged; accepted for
publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Absolute Magnitude Calibration for Red Giants based on the Colour-Magnitude Diagrams of Galactic Clusters. III-Calibration with 2MASS
We present two absolute magnitude calibrations, and , for
red giants with the colour magnitude diagrams of five Galactic clusters with
different metallicities i.e. M92, M13, M71, M67, and NGC 6791. The combination
of the absolute magnitudes of the red giant sequences with the corresponding
metallicities provides calibration for absolute magnitude estimation for red
giants for a given colour. The calibrations for and are
defined in the colour intervals and mag, respectively, and they cover the metallicity
interval dex. The absolute
magnitude residuals obtained by the application of the procedure to another set
of Galactic clusters lie in the intervals and
mag for and , respectively.
The means and standard deviations of the residuals are
and , and and
mag. The derived relations are applicable to stars
older than 4 Gyr, the age of the youngest calibrating cluster.Comment: 20 pages, including 8 figures and 22 tables, accepted for publication
in PASA. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1206.275
Extended Stromgren Photoelectric Photometry in NGC 752
Photoelectric photometry on the extended Stromgren system (uvbyCa) is
presented for 7 giants and 21 main sequence stars in the old open cluster, NGC
752. Analysis of the hk data for the turnoff stars yields a new determination
of the cluster mean metallicity. From 10 single-star members, [Fe/H] = -0.06
+/- 0.03, where the error quoted is the standard error of the mean and the
Hyades abundance is set at [Fe/H] = +0.12. This result is unchanged if all 20
stars within the limits of the hk metallicity calibration are included. The
derived [Fe/H] is in excellent agreement with past estimates using
properly-zeroed m1 data, transformed moderate-dispersion spectroscopy, and
recent high dispersion spectroscopy.Comment: 14 tex'd pages including 2 tables; 2 separate files with eps figures
Accepted for PASP March 200
Recommended from our members
2014 Murmuri Earthquake
We present source models for the August 2014 Murmuri (Dehloran) earthquake sequence in the Zagros Mountains of Iran. An Mw6.2 mainshock was followed by an aftershock sequence containing 5 events of Mw ≥ 5.4. Models of P and SH waveforms show that all events had dominantly thrust-faulting mechanisms, and had centroid depths that place them within the thick sedimentary sequence, above the crystalline basement. The combination of our estimated focal mechanisms, relative relocations of the event hypocentres, and the surface displacement patterns observed using InSAR, imply that the mainshock and largest aftershock ruptured different fault planes and both contributed to the surface deformation. The fault planes both slipped in horizontally-elongated patches, possibly due to rheological layering limiting the up- and down-dip extent of rupture. The slip vector of the Murmuri mainshock implies that the decollement beneath the Lorestan Arc is weaker than any such feature beneath the Dezful Embayment, providing an explanation for the plan-view sinuosity of the range-front of the Zagros Mountains.This work form part of the NERC- and ESRC-funded project ‘Earthquakes Without Frontiers’. JRE is funded by the NERC projects ‘COMET’ and ‘LiCS’.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggv36
Abundances for metal-poor stars with accurate parallaxes II. alpha-elements in the halo
Abundances for alpha-elements and Fe in about 150 field subdwarfs and early
subgiants with accurate parallaxes and kinematic data are used to discuss the
run of abundance ratios in metal-poor stars in the solar neighborhood. Based on
kinematics, we separated stars into two populations: the first one has a
positive velocity of rotation around the galactic center, and it is likely to
be related to the dissipational collapse of the galaxy; the second one has
either negligible or negative rotational velocity, and it is likely related to
an accretion component. The two populations show a large overlap in
metallicity. However, they show distinct chemical properties. For the first
population we found that there are close correlations (with small scatters
around) of the rotational velocity with metallicity and with the Fe/alpha
abundance ratio: this might be a signature of a not very fast collapse of the
progenitor clouds, with enough time for a significant contribution by SNe Ia,
although this result needs to be confirmed by a 3-D/non-LTE study. On the other
side, the second population exhibits a larger scatter in both the above
mentioned relations, and on average, a larger Fe/alpha ratio at a given
metallicity, suggesting a larger scatter in ages. We argue that the lack of
stars with moderate rotational velocities and high Fe/alpha abundance ratios is
due to the short merging time for protogalactic clouds with prograde motion,
while the presence of a group of counter-rotating stars with this
characteristics indicates a much longer typical lifetimes for protogalactic
fragments having such a motion. Finally, we found that perigalactic distances
correlate with the Fe/alpha abundance ratios better than the apogalactic
distances.Comment: 10 pages, 6 encapsulated figures, accepted for publication in A&
A New Procedure for the Photometric Parallax Estimation
We present a new procedure for photometric parallax estimation. The data for
1236 stars provide calibrations between the absolute magnitude offset from the
Hyades main-sequence and the UV-excess for different (B-V)o colour-index
intervals, i.e.: (0.3 0.4), (0.4 0.5), (0.5 0.6), (0.6 0.7), (0.7 0.8), (0.8
0.9), (0.9 1.0), and (1.0 1.1). The mean difference between the original and
estimated absolute magnitudes and the corresponding standard deviation are
rather small, +0.0002 and +/-0.0613 mag. The procedure has been adapted to the
Sloan photometry by means of colour equations and applied to a set of
artificial stars with different metallicity. The comparison of the absolute
magnitudes estimated by the new procedure and the canonical one indicates that
a single colour-magnitude diagram does not supply reliable absolute magnitudes
for stars with large range of metallicity.Comment: 26 pages, including 12 tables and 6 figures, accepted for publication
in PAS
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