34 research outputs found
A High-Resolution Multiband Survey of Westerlund 2 With the Hubble Space Telescope I: Is the Massive Star Cluster Double?
We present first results from a high resolution multi-band survey of the
Westerlund 2 region with the Hubble Space Telescope. Specifically, we imaged
Westerlund 2 with the Advanced Camera for Surveys through the , ,
and filters and with the Wide Field Camera 3 in the , ,
and filters. We derive the first high resolution pixel-to-pixel map of
the color excess of the gas associated with the cluster, combining
the H () and Pa () line observations. We
demonstrate that, as expected, the region is affected by significant
differential reddening with a median of ~mag. After separating
the populations of cluster members and foreground contaminants using a
vs. color-magnitude diagram, we identify a pronounced
pre-main-sequence population in Westerlund 2 showing a distinct turn-on. After
dereddening each star of Westerlund 2 individually in the color-magnitude
diagram we find via over-plotting PARSEC isochrones that the distance is in
good agreement with the literature value of ~kpc. With
zero-age-main-sequence fitting to two-color-diagrams, we derive a value of
total to selective extinction of . A spatial density map of
the stellar content reveals that the cluster might be composed of two clumps.
We estimate the same age of 0.5-2.0 Myr for both clumps. While the two clumps
appear to be coeval, the northern clump shows a lower stellar
surface density.Comment: 24 pages, 27 figures, 7 tables; Accepted for publication to The
Astronomical Journa
Star formation in the small magellanic cloud: The youngest star clusters
AbstractWe recently launched a comprehensive ground based (ESO/VLT/NTT) and space (HST & SST) study of the present and past star formation in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), in clusters and in the field, with the goal of understanding how star and cluster formation occur and propagate in an environment of low metallicity, with a gas and dust content that is significantly lower than in the Milky Way. In this paper, we present some preliminary results of the "young cluster" program, where we acquired deep F555W (~V), and F814W (~I) HST/ACS images of the four young and massive SMC star clusters: NGC 346, NGC 602, NGC 299, and NGC 376
RuâCeO2 and NiâCeO2 Coated on Open-Cell Metallic Foams by Electrodeposition for the CO2 Methanation
CO2 methanation structured catalysts, made by a layer of RuâCeO2 or NiâCeO2 (Ru/Ce = 3/97; Ni/Ce = 1/3 and 3/1) on open-cell NiCrAl foams, are prepared by electrodeposition and a subsequent calcination step. The performance of the catalysts at a space velocity of 320,000 mL gcatâ1 hâ1 in a feedstock with H2/CO2/N2 = 4/1/1 v/v, significantly depends on the Ni content and the preparation method. A low Ru or Ni content promotes the metalâCeO2 interaction, the formation of defects in CeO2 as well as the development of a lower amount of cracks in the coating; however, the catalysts show a poor CO2 conversion and selectivity to CH4. The CH4 production rate at low temperature largely increases for the high Ni loaded catalyst, 68.7 LCH4 gNiâ1 hâ1 at 350 °C oven temperature. This productivity is similar to the value obtained with a Ni3Ce1 pellet catalyst prepared by the coprecipitation method, a behavior not achievable for low Ru- and Ni-loaded catalysts
Present-day Mass Function of Six Small Magellanic Cloud Intermediate-age and Old Star Clusters
We determined the present-day mass functions (PDMFs) of the five intermediate-age star clusters Lindsay 1, Kron 3, NGC339, NGC416, and Lindsay 38 and the old star cluster NGC121 in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) based on observations with the Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys. The global PDMFs are well matched by Salpeter-like power laws from their main-sequence turnoffs to 0.6 M with a power-law exponent α ranging from 1.51 0.11 (Lindsay 1) to 2.29 0.15 (NGC339). We derive total stellar masses of 105 M , except for Lindsay 38, whose mass is of the order of 104 M. Differences between the PDMFs most likely reflect the varying stages of dynamical evolution of the clusters. These SMC clusters do not follow the α versus concentration parameter c correlation as found for Galactic globular clusters of similar mass. This might be an age effect or due to their location in a galaxy where bulge and disk crossings do not play a role. No correlation is found between α and the cluster core and tidal radii (rc and rt , respectively), the half-light radii rh , age, central surface brightness, metallicity, and galactocentric radius rgc. All six clusters mass-segregated to different degrees. The two clusters Lindsay 1 and Kron 3 barely show signs for mass segregation, but have low-mass star deficient global PDMFs and might be the remnants of star clusters whose outer parts were stripped. A trend exists between the degree of mass segregation and the ratio age/relaxation time tr, h, which indicates the stage of dynamical evolution for a cluster. Our data thus suggest that the SMC clusters in the present sample had a range of initial densities and presumably different amounts of mass loss that led to different rates of dynamical evolution. The clusters' positions in the rh, m/rt versus r0/rh, m plane imply that all of the clusters are tidally filled. Our SMC clusters with projected distances larger than 3kpc from the SMC center should have Jacobi radii significantly larger than their observed King tidal radii. The clusters also have higher mean densities than the estimated central density of the SMC. It is possible that these clusters formed in a denser overall environment of the younger SMC, or that the cluster structures were unusually strongly influenced by encounters with giant molecular clouds
Structural Parameters of Seven SMC Intermediate-Age and Old Star Clusters
We present structural parameters for the seven intermediate-age and old star
clusters NGC121, Lindsay 1, Kron 3, NGC339, NGC416, Lindsay 38, and NGC419 in
the Small Magellanic Cloud. We fit King profiles and Elson, Fall, and Freeman
profiles to both surface-brightness and star count data taken with the Advanced
Camera for Surveys aboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Clusters older than 1 Gyr
show a spread in cluster core radii that increases with age, while the youngest
clusters have relatively compact cores. No evidence for post core collapse
clusters was found. We find no correlation between core radius and distance
from the SMC center, although consistent with other studies of dwarf galaxies,
some relatively old and massive clusters have low densities. The oldest SMC
star cluster, the only globular NGC121, is the most elliptical object of the
studied clusters. No correlation is seen between ellipticity and distance from
the SMC center. The structures of these massive intermediate-age (1-8 Gyr) SMC
star clusters thus appear to primarily result from internal evolutionary
processes.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figure
The young massive star cluster Westerlund 2 observed with MUSE. II. MUSEpack -- a Python package to analyze the kinematics of young star clusters
We mapped the Galactic young massive star cluster Westerlund 2 (Wd2) with the
integral field spectrograph MUSE (spatial resolution: 0.2arcsec/px, spectral
resolution: = 1.25A, wavelength range 4600-9350A) mounted on
the VLT, as part of an on-going study to measure the stellar and gas kinematics
of the cluster region. In this paper we present the fully reduced dataset and
introduce our new Python package "MUSEpack", which we developed to measure
stellar radial velocities with an absolute precision of 1-2km/s without the
necessity of a spectral template library. This novel method uses the
two-dimensional spectra and an atomic transition line library to create
templates around strong absorption lines for each individual star. The code
runs fully automatically on multi-core machines, which makes it possible to
efficiently determine stellar radial velocities of a large number of stars with
the necessary precision to measure the velocity dispersion of young star
clusters. MUSEpack also provides an enhanced method for removing telluric lines
in crowded fields without sky exposures and a Python wrapper for ESO's data
reduction pipeline. We observed Wd2 with a total of 11 short and 5 long
exposures to cover the bright nebular emission and OB stars, as well as the
fainter pre-main sequence stars down to ~1M. The survey covers an area
of ~11arcmin (15.8pc). In total, we extracted 1,725 stellar spectra
with a mean S/N>5 per pixel. A typical radial velocity (RV) uncertainty of
4.78km/s, 2.92km/s, and 1.1km/s is reached for stars with a mean S/N>10,
S/N>20, S/N>50 per pixel, respectively. Depending on the number of spectral
lines used to measure the RVs, it is possible to reach RV accuracies of
0.9km/s, 1.3km/s, and 2.2km/s with , 3-4, and 1-2 spectral lines,
respectively. The combined statistical uncertainty on the radial velocity
measurements is 1.10km/s.Comment: accepted to AJ; 19 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables; MUSEpack is available
from https://github.com/pzeidler89/MUSEpack; The documentation can be found
on: https://musepack.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.htm
An Open System for Social Computation
Part of the power of social computation comes from using the collective intelligence of humans to tame the aggregate uncertainty of (otherwise) low veracity data obtained from human and automated sources. We have witnessed a surge in development of social computing systems but, ironically, there have been few attempts to generalise across this activity so that creation of the underlying mechanisms themselves can be made more social. We describe a method for achieving this by standardising patterns of social computation via lightweight formal specifications (we call these social artifacts) that can be connected to existing internet architectures via a single model of computation. Upon this framework we build a mechanism for extracting provenance meta-data across social computations
Age Determination of Six Intermediate-age SMC Star Clusters with HST/ACS
We present a photometric analysis of the star clusters Lindsay 1, Kron 3,
NGC339, NGC416, Lindsay 38, and NGC419 in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC),
observed with the Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) in
the F555W and F814W filters. Our color magnitude diagrams (CMDs) extend ~3.5
mag deeper than the main-sequence turnoff points, deeper than any previous
data. Cluster ages were derived using three different isochrone models: Padova,
Teramo, and Dartmouth, which are all available in the ACS photometric system.
Fitting observed ridgelines for each cluster, we provide a homogeneous and
unique set of low-metallicity, single-age fiducial isochrones. The cluster CMDs
are best approximated by the Dartmouth isochrones for all clusters, except for
NGC419 where the Padova isochrones provided the best fit. The CMD of NGC419
shows several main-sequence turn-offs, which belong to the cluster and to the
SMC field. We thus derive an age range of 1.2-1.6 Gyr for NGC419.
Interestingly, our intermediate-age star clusters have a metallicity spread of
~0.6 dex, which demonstrates that the SMC does not have a smooth, monotonic
age-metallicity relation. We find an indication for centrally concentrated blue
straggler star candidates in NGC416, while for the other clusters these are not
present. Using the red clump magnitudes, we find that the closest cluster,
NGC419 (~50kpc), and the farthest cluster, Lindsay 38 (~67kpc), have a relative
distance of ~17kpc, which confirms the large depth of the SMC.Comment: 25 pages, 45 Figure