224 research outputs found
On the white dwarf cooling sequence with extremely large telescopes
We present new diagnostics of white dwarf (WD) cooling sequences and
luminosity functions (LFs) in the near-infrared (NIR) bands that will exploit
the sensitivity and resolution of future extremely large telescopes. The
collision-induced absorption (CIA) of molecular hydrogen causes a clearly
defined blue turn-off along the WD (WDBTO) cooling sequences and a bright
secondary maximum in the WD LFs. These features are independent of age over a
broad age range and are minimally affected by metal abundance. This means that
the NIR magnitudes of the WDBTO are very promising distance indicators. The
interplay between the cooling time of progressively more massive WDs and the
onset of CIA causes a red turn-off along the WD (WDRTO) cooling sequences and a
well defined faint peak in the WD LFs. These features are very sensitive to the
cluster age, and indeed the K-band magnitude of the faint peak increases by
0.2--0.25 mag/Gyr for ages between 10 and 14 Gyr. On the other hand, the faint
peak in the optical WD LF increases in the same age range by 0.17 (V band) and
0.15 (I band) mag/Gyr. Moreover, we also suggest to use the difference in
magnitude between the main sequence turn-off and either the WDBTO (optical) or
the WDRTO (NIR). This age diagnostic is also independent of distance and
reddening. Once again the sensitivity in the K band (0.15-0.20 mag/Gyr) is on
average a factor of two higher than in the optical bands (0.10 [V band], 0.07
[I band] mag/Gyr). Finally, we also outline the use of the new diagnostics to
constrain the CO phase separation upon crystallization.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted on A&
Using the Ca II Triplet to Trace Abundance Variations in Individual Red Giant Branch stars in Three Nearby Galaxies
Spectroscopic abundance determinations for stars spanning a Hubble time in
age are necessary in order to unambiguously determine the evolutionary
histories of galaxies. Using FORS1 in Multi-Object Spectroscopy mode on ANTU
(UT1) at the ESO-VLT on Paranal we obtained near infrared spectra from which we
measured the equivalent widths of the two strongest Ca II triplet lines to
determine metal abundances for a sample of Red Giant Branch stars, selected
from ESO-NTT optical (I, V-I) photometry of three nearby, Local Group,
galaxies: the Sculptor Dwarf Spheroidal, the Fornax Dwarf Spheroidal and the
Dwarf Irregular NGC 6822. The summed equivalent width of the two strongest
lines in the Ca II triplet absorption line feature, centered at 8500A, can be
readily converted into an [Fe/H] abundance using the previously established
calibrations by Armandroff & Da Costa (1991) and Rutledge, Hesser & Stetson
(1997). We measured metallicities for 37 stars in Sculptor, 32 stars in Fornax,
and 23 stars in NGC 6822, yielding more precise estimates of the metallicity
distribution functions for these galaxies than it is possible to obtain
photometrically. In the case of NGC 6822, this is the first direct measurement
of the abundances of the intermediate-age and old stellar populations. We find
metallicity spreads in each galaxy which are broadly consistent with the
photometric width of the Red Giant Branch, although the abundances of
individual stars do not always appear to correspond to their colour. This is
almost certainly predominantly due to a highly variable star formation rate
with time in these galaxies, which results in a non-uniform,
non-globular-cluster-like, evolution of the Ca/Fe ratio.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Resolved stellar population of distant galaxies in the ELT era
The expected imaging capabilities of future Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs)
will offer the unique possibility to investigate the stellar population of
distant galaxies from the photometry of the stars in very crowded fields. Using
simulated images and photometric analysis we explore here two representative
science cases aimed at recovering the characteristics of the stellar
populations in the inner regions of distant galaxies. Specifically: case A) at
the center of the disk of a giant spiral in the Centaurus Group, (mu B~21,
distance of 4.6 Mpc); and, case B) at half of the effective radius of a giant
elliptical in the Virgo Cluster (mu~19.5, distance of 18 Mpc). We generate
synthetic frames by distributing model stellar populations and adopting a
representative instrumental set up, i.e. a 42 m Telescope operating close to
the diffraction limit. The effect of crowding is discussed in detail showing
how stars are measured preferentially brighter than they are as the confusion
limit is approached. We find that (i) accurate photometry (sigma~0.1,
completeness >90%) can be obtained for case B) down to I~28.5, J~27.5 allowing
us to recover the stellar metallicity distribution in the inner regions of
ellipticals in Virgo to within ~0.1 dex; (ii) the same photometric accuracy
holds for the science case A) down to J~28.0, K~27.0, enabling to reconstruct
of the star formation history up to the Hubble time via simple star counts in
diagnostic boxes. For this latter case we discuss the possibility of deriving
more detailed information on the star formation history from the analysis of
their Horizontal Branch stars. We show that the combined features of high
sensitivity and angular resolution of ELTs may open a new era for our knowledge
of the stellar content of galaxies of different morphological type up to the
distance of the Virgo cluster.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, PASP accepted in pubblicatio
Stellar populations in the ELT perspective
We discuss the impact that the next generation of Extremely Large Telescopes
will have on the open astrophysical problems of resolved stellar populations.
In particular, we address the interplay between multiband photometry and
spectroscopy.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the proceedings of "EWASS 2013
Symposium 5: Local Group, Local Cosmology," (8-9 July 2013, Turku, Finland),
Mem. S.A.It, M. Monelli and S. Salvadori Ed
Massive stellar systems: observational challenges and perspectives in the E-ELT era
We introduce the empirical framework concerning optical and near-infrared (NIR) photometry of crowded stellar fields. In particular, we address the impact that linear detectors and analytical PSF played in improving the accuracy and the precision of multi-band color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs). We focus our attention on recent findings based on deep NIR images collected with Adaptive Optics (AO) systems at the 8-10m class telescopes and discuss pros and cons of the different approaches. We also discuss the estimate of the absolute age of globular clusters using a well defined knee along the lower main sequence. We mention the role which the current AO-assisted instruments will have in addressing longstanding astrophysical problems of the Galactic center. Finally, we outline the role of first generation of E-ELT instruments upon photometry and spectroscopy of crowded stellar fields
The Carina Project. VIII. The {\alpha}-element abundances
We have performed a new abundance analysis of Carina Red Giant (RG) stars
from spectroscopic data collected with UVES (high resolution) and
FLAMES/GIRAFFE (high and medium resolution) at ESO/VLT. The former sample
includes 44 RGs, while the latter consists of 65 (high) and ~800 (medium
resolution) RGs, covering a significant fraction of the galaxy's RG branch
(RGB), and red clump stars. To improve the abundance analysis at the faint
magnitude limit, the FLAMES/GIRAFFE data were divided into ten surface gravity
and effective temperature bins. The spectra of the stars belonging to the same
gravity/temperature bin were stacked. This approach allowed us to increase by
at least a factor of five the signal-to-noise ratio in the faint limit
(V>20.5mag). We took advantage of the new photometry index cU,B,I introduced by
Monelli et al. (2014), as an age and probably a metallicity indicator, to split
stars along the RGB. These two stellar populations display distinct [Fe/H] and
[Mg/H] distributions: their mean Fe abundances are -2.150.06dex
(sig=0.28), and -1.750.03dex (sig=0.21), respectively. The two iron
distributions differ at the 75% level. This supports preliminary results by
Lemasle et al. (2012) and by Monelli et al. (2014). Moreover, we found that the
old and intermediate-age stellar populations have mean [Mg/H] abundances of
-1.910.05dex (sig=0.22) and -1.350.03dex (sig=0.22); these differ at
the 83% level. Carina's {\alpha}-element abundances agree, within 1sigma, with
similar abundances for field Halo stars and for cluster (Galactic, Magellanic)
stars. The same outcome applies to nearby dwarf spheroidals and ultra-faint
dwarf galaxies, in the iron range covered by Carina stars. Finally, we found
evidence of a clear correlation between Na and O abundances, thus suggesting
that Carina's chemical enrichment history is quite different than in the
globular clusters.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures, 11 tables, accepted for publication in A&
On the kinematic separation of field and cluster stars across the Bulge globular NGC 6528
We present deep and precise multi-band photometry of the Galactic Bulge
globular cluster NGC6528. The current dataset includes optical and
near-infrared images collected with ACS/WFC, WFC3/UVIS, and WFC3/IR on board
the Hubble Space Telescope. The images cover a time interval of almost ten
years and we have been able to carry out a proper-motion separation between
cluster and field stars. We performed a detailed comparison in the m_F814W,
m_F606W - m_F814W Color-Magnitude Diagram with two empirical calibrators
observed in the same bands. We found that NGC6528 is coeval with and more
metal-rich than 47Tuc. Moreover, it appears older and more metal-poor than the
super-metal-rich open cluster NGC6791. The current evidence is supported by
several diagnostics (red horizontal branch, red giant branch bump, shape of the
sub-giant branch, slope of the main sequence) that are minimally affected by
uncertainties in reddening and distance. We fit the optical observations with
theoretical isochrones based on a scaled-solar chemical mixture and found an
age of 11 +- 1 Gyr and an iron abundance slightly above solar ([Fe/H = +0.20).
The iron abundance and the old cluster age further support the recent
spectroscopic findings suggesting a rapid chemical enrichment of the Galactic
Bulge.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures (2 at low resolution); added references;
corrected figure 3, 4, 5, 8 and 9; results unchanged. Erratum to be published
in Ap
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