197 research outputs found
Keck-Nirspec Infrared OH Lines: Oxygen Abundances in Metal-Poor Stars Down to [Fe/H] = -2.9
Infrared OH lines at 1.5 - 1.7 um in the H band were obtained with the
NIRSPEC high-resolution spectrograph at the 10m Keck Telescope for a sample of
seven metal-poor stars. Detailed analyses have been carried out, based on
optical high-resolution data obtained with the FEROS spectrograph at ESO.
Stellar parameters were derived by adopting infrared flux method effective
temperatures, trigonometric and/or evolutionary gravities and metallicities
from FeII lines. We obtain that the sample stars with metallicities [Fe/H] <
-2.2 show a mean oxygen abundance [O/Fe] ~ 0.54, for a solar oxygen abundance
of epsilon(O) = 8.87, or [O/Fe] ~ 0.64 if epsilon(O) = 8.77 is assumed.Comment: To be published in ApJ 575 (August 10
Abundances of Baade's Window Giants from Keck/HIRES Spectra: I. Stellar Parameters and [Fe/H] Values
We present the first results of a new abundance survey of the Milky Way bulge
based on Keck/HIRES spectra of 27 K-giants in the Baade's Window (, ) field. The spectral data used in this study are of much higher resolution
and signal-to-noise than previous optical studies of Galactic bulge stars. The
[Fe/H] values of our stars, which range between -1.29 and , were used to
recalibrate large low resolution surveys of bulge stars. Our best value for the
mean [Fe/H] of the bulge is . This mean value is similar to the
mean metallicity of the local disk and indicates that there cannot be a strong
metallicity gradient inside the solar circle. The metallicity distribution of
stars confirms that the bulge does not suffer from the so-called ``G-dwarf''
problem. This paper also details the new abundance techniques necessary to
analyze very metal-rich K-giants, including a new Fe line list and regions of
low blanketing for continuum identification.Comment: Accepted for publication in January 2006 Astrophysical Journal. Long
tables 3--6 withheld to save space (electronic tables in journal paper). 53
pages, 10 figures, 9 table
Abundances and Kinematics of Field Halo and Disk Stars I: Observational Data and Abundance Analysis
We describe observations and abundance analysis of a high-resolution,
high-S/N survey of 168 stars, most of which are metal-poor dwarfs. We follow a
self-consistent LTE analysis technique to determine the stellar parameters and
abundances, and estimate the effects of random and systematic uncertainties on
the resulting abundances. Element-to-iron ratios are derived for key alpha,
odd, Fe-peak, r- and s-process elements. Effects of Non-LTE on the analysis of
Fe I lines are shown to be very small on the average. Spectroscopically
determined surface gravities are derived that are generally close to those
obtained from Hipparcos parallaxes.Comment: 41 pages, 7 Postscript figures. Accepted for publication in the A
Remarks on symplectic twistor spaces
We consider some classical fibre bundles furnished with almost complex
structures of twistor type, deduce their integrability in some cases and study
\textit{self-holomorphic} sections of a \textit{symplectic} twistor space. With
these we define a moduli space of -compatible complex structures. We
recall the theory of flag manifolds in order to study the Siegel domain and
other domains alike, which is the fibre of the referred twistor space. Finally
the structure equations for the twistor of a Riemann surface with the canonical
symplectic-metric connection are deduced, based on a given conformal coordinate
on the surface. We then relate with the moduli space defined previously.Comment: 20 pages, title changed since v2, accepted in AMPA toda
Improved Color-Temperature Relations and Bolometric Corrections for Cool Stars
We present new grids of colors and bolometric corrections for F-K stars
having 4000 K < Teff < 6500 K, 0.0 < log g < 4.5 and -3.0 < [Fe/H] < 0.0. A
companion paper extends these calculations into the M giant regime. Colors are
tabulated for Johnson U-V and B-V; Cousins V-R and V-I; Johnson-Glass V-K, J-K
and H-K; and CIT/CTIO V-K, J-K, H-K and CO. We have developed these
color-temperature (CT) relations by convolving synthetic spectra with
photometric filter-transmission-profiles. The synthetic spectra have been
computed with the SSG spectral synthesis code using MARCS stellar atmosphere
models as input. Both of these codes have been improved substantially,
especially at low temperatures, through the incorporation of new opacity data.
The resulting synthetic colors have been put onto the observational systems by
applying color calibrations derived from models and photometry of field stars
which have Teffs determined by the infrared-flux method. The color calibrations
have zero points and slopes which change most of the original synthetic colors
by less than 0.02 mag and 5%, respectively. The adopted Teff scale (Bell &
Gustafsson 1989) is confirmed by the extraordinary agreement between the
predicted and observed angular diameters of the field stars. We have also
derived empirical CT relations from the field-star photometry. Except for the
coolest dwarfs (Teff < 5000 K), our calibrated, solar-metallicity model colors
are found to match these and other empirical relations quite well. Our
calibrated, 4 Gyr, solar-metallicity isochrone also provides a good match to
color-magnitude diagrams of M67. We regard this as evidence that our calibrated
colors can be applied to many astrophysical problems, including modelling the
integrated light of galaxies. (abridged)Comment: To appear in the March 2000 issue of the Astronomical Journal. 72
pages including 16 embedded postscript figures (one page each) and 6 embedded
postscript tables (18 pages total
The accuracy of stellar atmospheric parameter determinations: a case study with HD 32115 and HD 37594
We present detailed parameter determinations of two chemically normal late
A-type stars, HD 32115 and HD 37594, to uncover the reasons behind large
discrepancies between two previous analyses of these stars performed with a
semi-automatic procedure and a "classical" analysis. Our study is based on high
resolution, high signal-to-noise spectra obtained at the McDonald Observatory.
Our method is based on the simultaneous use of all available observables:
multicolor photometry, pressure-sensitive magnesium lines, metallic lines and
Balmer line profiles. Our final set of fundamental parameters fits, within the
error bars, all available observables. It differs from the published results
obtained with a semi-automatic procedure. A direct comparison between our new
observational material and the spectra previously used by other authors shows
that the quality of the data is not the origin of the discrepancies. As the two
stars require a substantial macroturbulence velocity to fit the line profiles,
we concluded that neglecting this additional broadening in the semi-automatic
analysis is one origin of discrepancy. The use of FeI excitation equilibrium
and of the Fe ionisation equilibrium, to derive effective temperature and
surface gravity, respectively, neglecting all other indicators leads to a
systematically erroneously high effective temperature. We deduce that the
results obtained using only one parameter indicator might be biased and that
those results need to be cautiously taken when performing further detailed
analyses, such as modelling of the asteroseismic frequencies or characterising
transiting exoplanets.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
Modeling Mid-Ultraviolet Spectra. I. Temperatures of Metal-Poor Stars
Determining the properties of old stellar systems using evolutionary
population synthesis requires a library of reliable model stellar fluxes.
Empirical libraries are limited to spectra of stars in the solar neighborhood,
with nearly solar abundances and abundance ratios. We report here a first step
towards providing a flux library that includes nonsolar abundances, based on
calculations from first principles that are calibrated empirically. We have
started with main-sequence stars, whose light dominates the mid-ultraviolet
spectrum of an old stellar system. We have calculated mid-ultraviolet spectra
for the Sun and nine nearby, near-main-sequence stars spanning metallicities
from less than 1/100 solar to greater than solar, encompassing a range of
light-element abundance enhancements. We first determined temperatures of eight
of the stars by analyzing optical echelle spectra together with the
mid-ultraviolet. Both could be matched at the same time only when models with
no convective overshoot were adopted, and only when an approximate chromosphere
was incorporated near the surface of relatively metal-rich models. Extensive
modifications to mid-UV line parameters were also required, notably the manual
assignment of approximate identifications for mid-UV lines missing from
laboratory linelists. Without recourse to additional missing opacity, these
measures suffice to reproduce in detail almost the entire mid-UV spectrum of
solar-temperature stars up to one-tenth solar metallicity, and the region from
2900A to 3100A throughout the entire metallicity range. Ramifications for
abundance determinations in individual metal-poor stars and for age-metallicity
determinations of old stellar systems are briefly discussed, with emphasis on
the predictive power of the calculations.Comment: Proof revision -Minor changes to revised version submitted to
Astrophysical Journal May 1, 2001. 29 pages, 4 figures (Fig. 3 with 5 panels
and Fig. 4 with 6 panels). Figures 1 and 2 are .gif; postscript versions of
Figures 1 and 2 are available from
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~rtr/uv/index.htm
'Sculptor'-ing the Galaxy? The Chemical Compositions of Red Giants in the Sculptor Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
We have used high-resolution, high signal-to-noise spectra obtained with the
VLT and UVES to determine abundances of 17 elements in 4 red giants in the
Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy. Our [Fe/H] values range from --2.10 to
--0.97, confirming previous findings of a large metallicity spread. We have
combined our data with similar data for five Sculptor giants studied recently
to form one of the largest samples of high resolution abundances yet obtained
for a dwarf spheroidal galaxy, covering essentially the full known metallicity
range. These properties allow us to establish trends of [X/Fe] with [Fe/H] for
many elements, X. The trends are significantly different from the trends seen
in galactic halo and globular cluster stars. We compare our Sculptor sample to
their most similar Galactic counterparts and find substantial differences
remain even with these stars. The many discrepancies in the relationships
between [X/Fe] as seen in Sculptor compared with Galactic field stars indicates
that our halo cannot be made up in bulk of stars similar to those presently
seen in dwarf spheroidal galaxies like Sculptor. These results have serious
implications for the Searle-Zinn and hierarchical galaxy formation scenarios.
We also find that the most metal-rich star in our sample is a heavy
element-rich star. A very high percentage of such heavy element stars are now
known in dwarf spheroidals compared to the halo, further mitigating against the
formation of the halo from such objects.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ, 46 pages, 11 figure
Quantum Smoluchowski equation: Escape from a metastable state
We develop a quantum Smoluchowski equation in terms of a true probability
distribution function to describe quantum Brownian motion in configuration
space in large friction limit at arbitrary temperature and derive the rate of
barrier crossing and tunneling within an unified scheme. The present treatment
is independent of path integral formalism and is based on canonical
quantization procedure.Comment: 10 pages, To appear in the Proceedings of Statphys - Kolkata I
Lithium isotopic abundances in metal-poor halo stars
Very high-quality spectra of 24 metal-poor halo dwarfs and subgiants have
been acquired with ESO's VLT/UVES for the purpose of determining Li isotopic
abundances. The derived 1D, non-LTE 7Li abundances from the LiI 670.8nm line
reveal a pronounced dependence on metallicity but with negligible scatter
around this trend. Very good agreement is found between the abundances from the
LiI 670.8nm line and the LiI 610.4nm line. The estimated primordial 7Li
abundance is $7Li/H = 1.1-1.5 x 10^-10, which is a factor of three to four
lower than predicted from standard Big Bang nucleosynthesis with the baryon
density inferred from the cosmic microwave background. Interestingly, 6Li is
detected in nine of our 24 stars at the >2sigma significance level. Our
observations suggest the existence of a 6Li plateau at the level of log 6Li =
0.8; however, taking into account predictions for 6Li destruction during the
pre-main sequence evolution tilts the plateau such that the 6Li abundances
apparently increase with metallicity. Our most noteworthy result is the
detection of 6Li in the very metal-poor star LP815-43. Such a high 6Li
abundance during these early Galactic epochs is very difficult to achieve by
Galactic cosmic ray spallation and alpha-fusion reactions. It is concluded that
both Li isotopes have a pre-Galactic origin. Possible 6Li production channels
include proto-galactic shocks and late-decaying or annihilating supersymmetric
particles during the era of Big Bang nucleosynthesis. The presence of 6Li
limits the possible degree of stellar 7Li depletion and thus sharpens the
discrepancy with standard Big Bang nucleosynthesis.Comment: Replaced with version accepted by ApJ. Minor changes compared with
previous version (some discussion and references added
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