223 research outputs found
The luminosity function of Palomar 5 and its tidal tails
We present the main sequence luminosity function of the tidally disrupted
globular cluster Palomar 5 and its tidal tails. For this work we analyzed
imaging data obtained with the Wide Field Camera at the INT (La Palma) and data
from the Wide Field Imager at the MPG/ESO 2.2 m telescope at La Silla down to a
limiting magnitude of approximately 24.5 mag in B. Our results indicate that
preferentially fainter stars were removed from the cluster so that the LF of
the cluster's main body exhibits a significant degree of flattening compared to
other GCs. This is attributed to its advanced dynamical evolution. The LF of
the tails is, in turn, enhanced with faint, low-mass stars, which we interpret
as a consequence of mass segregation in the cluster.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the
conference "Satellites and tidal streams" held at La Palma, Canary Islands,
May 26 - 30, 200
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Palomar 5 and its tidal tails: New observational results
Sloan Digital Sky Survey data for the field of the cluster Pal 5 reveal the existence of a long massive stream of tidal debris spanning an arc of 10{sup o} on the sky. Pal 5 thus provides an outstanding example for tidal disruption of globular clusters in the Milky Way. Radial velocities from VLT spectra show that Pal 5 has an extremely low velocity dispersion, in accordance with the very low mass derived from its total luminosity
The Tidal Tails of NGC 5466
The study of substructure in the stellar halo of the Milky Way has made a lot
of progress in recent years, especially with the advent of surveys like the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Here, we study the newly discovered tidal tails of
the Galactic globular cluster NGC 5466. By means of numerical simulations, we
reproduce the shape, direction and surface density of the tidal tails, as well
as the structural and kinematical properties of the present-day NGC 5466.
Although its tails are very extended in SDSS data (> 45 degrees), NGC 5466 is
only losing mass slowly at the present epoch and so can survive for probably a
further Hubble time. The effects of tides at perigalacticon and disc crossing
are the dominant causes of the slow dissolution of NGC 5466, accounting for
about 60 % of the mass loss over the course of its evolution. The morphology of
the tails provides a constraint on the proper motion -- the observationally
determined proper motion has to be refined (within the stated error margins) to
match the location of the tidal tails.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
A calibration map for Wide Field Imager photometry
We present a prescription to correct large-scale intensity variations
affecting imaging data taken with the Wide Field Imager (WFI) at the MPG/ESO
2.2 m telescope at the European Southern Observatory at La Silla in Chile. Such
smoothly varying, large-scale gradients are primarily caused by non-uniform
illumination due to stray light, which cannot be removed using standard
flatfield procedures. By comparing our observations to the well-calibrated,
homogeneous multi-colour photometry from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey we
characterise the intensity gradients across the camera by second-order
polynomials. The application of these polynomials to our data removes the
gradients and reduces the overall scatter. We also demonstrate that applying
our correction to an independent WFI dataset significantly reduces its
large-scale variations, indicating that our prescription provides a generally
valid and simple tool for calibrating WFI photometry.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomische
Nachrichte
Theoretical isochrones in several photometric systems II. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey ugriz system
Following Paper I, we provide extended tables of bolometric corrections,
extinction coefficients, stellar isochrones, and integrated magnitudes and
colours of single-burst stellar populations, for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS) ugriz photometric system. They are tested on comparisons with DR1 data
for a few stellar systems, namely the Palomar 5 and NGC 2419 globular clusters
and the Draco dSph galaxy.Comment: 11 pages, to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysics, data files are
available in http://pleiadi.pd.astro.it/isoc_photsys.01/isoc_photsys.01.htm
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