143 research outputs found
Some Systematics of Galactic Globular Clusters
The global properties of all known Galactic globular clusters are examined.
The relationship between the luminosities and the metallicities of Galactic
globular clusters is found to be complex. Among luminous clusters there is a
correlation in the sense that the oldest clusters are slightly more metal
deficient than are younger clusters. However, no such clear-cut relationship is
found among the faintest globular clusters. The central concentration index C
of globular clusters is seen to be independent of metallicity. The dependence
of the half-light radii of globular clusters on their Galactocentric distances
can be approximated by the relation . Clusters with
collapsed cores are mostly situated close to the Galactic nucleus. For kpc the luminosities and the radii of clusters appear to be uncorrelated.
The Galaxy differs from the LMC and the SMC in that it appears to lack highly
flattened luminous clusters. Galactic globular clusters with ages 13.0
Gyr are all of Oosterhoff type II, whereas almost all of those with ages
13.0 Gyr have been assigned to Oosterhoff type I. Globular clusters with ages
11.5 Gyr are all located in the outer Galactic halo, have below-average
luminosities and above-average radii. On the other hand the very old globular
cluster NGC 6522 is situated close to the Galactic nucleus.Comment: PASP, in pres
Variable Stars in the Field of the Globular Cluster NGC 3201
We report on the discovery and analysis of 14 short-period variable stars in
the field of the southern globular cluster NGC 3201, located within roughly two
magnitudes on either side of the main-sequence turnoff. 11 of these variable
stars are eclipsing binaries, one is an RR Lyrae, and two are thus far
unclassified systems. Among the eclipsing binary stars, nine are of the W Ursa
Majoris (W UMa) type, one an Algol (EA) system, and one a detached system.
Using spectroscopic follow-up observations as well as analysis of the
variables' locations in the color-magnitude diagram of the cluster, we find
that only one variable star (a W UMa type blue straggler) is actually a member
of NGC 3201. We present the phased photometry lightcurves for all the variable
star systems as well as their locations in the field-of-view and in the
color-magnitude diagram.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables; accepted for the January 2002 issue of
AJ. For full resolution versions of this paper, go to:
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/users/kaspar/html/vars3201.ps.gz or
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/users/kaspar/html/vars3201.pd
Variable Stars in the Globular Cluster M5. Application of the Image Subtraction Method
We present -band light curves of 61 variables from the core of the
globular cluster M5 obtained using a newly developed image subtraction method
(ISM). Four of these variables were previously unknown. Only 26 variables were
found in the same field using photometry obtained with DoPHOT software. Fourier
parameters of the ISM light curves have relative errors up to 20 times smaller
than parameters measured from DoPHOT photometry. We conclude that the new
method is very promising for searching for variable stars in the cores of the
globular clusters and gives very accurate relative photometry with quality
comparable to photometry obtained by HST. We also show that the variable V104
is not an eclipsing star as has been suggested, but is an RRc star showing
non-radial pulsations.Comment: submitted to MNRAS, 9 pages, 4 figure
Variable stars in the globular cluster M13
Results of a search for variable stars in the central region of the globular
cluster M13 are presented. Prior to this study, 36 variable and suspected
variable stars were known in this cluster (Osborn 2000; Clement et al. 2001).
Of these stars, five were not observed by us. We find v3, v4, v10, v12, and v13
to be constant in light. Surprisingly, only two out of the ten variable star
candidates of Kadla et al. (1980) appear to be variable. Both are RRc
variables. Additionally, three RR Lyrae stars and one SX Phoenicis variable are
discovered. Three close frequencies are detected for an RRc star v36. It
appears that this variable is another multi-periodic RR Lyrae star pulsating in
non-radial modes. Light curves of the three known BL Herculis stars and all
known RR Lyrae stars are presented. The total number of known RR Lyrae stars in
M13 is now nine. Only one is an RRab star. The mean period of RRc variables
amounts to 0.36 +/- 0.05 d, suggesting that M13 should be included in the group
of Oosterhoff type II globular clusters. Mean V magnitudes and ranges of
variation are derived for seven RR Lyrae and three BL Herculis variables.
Almost all observed bright giants show some degree of variability. In
particular, we confirm the variability of two red giants announced to be
variable by Osborn (2000) and in addition find five new cases.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in AA
BVI Photometric Variability Survey of M3
We have conducted a three band (BVI) variability survey of the globular
cluster M3. This is the first three band survey of the cluster using modern
image subtraction techniques. Observations were made over 9 nights in 1998 on
the 1.2m telescope at the F.L. Whipple Observatory in Arizona. We present
photometry for 180 variable stars in the M3 field, of which 12 are newly
discovered. New discoveries include six SX Phe type variables which all lie in
the blue straggler region of the color magnitude diagram, two new first
overtone RR Lyrae, a candidate multi-mode RR Lyrae, a detached eclipsing
binary, and two unclassified variables. We also provide revised periods for 52
of the 168 previously known variables that we observe. The catalog and
photometry for the variable stars are available via anonymous ftp at
ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/kstanek/M3/Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures. Movies associated with this paper at
http://www-cfa.harvard.edu/~jhartman/M3_movies.html Accepted for publication
in the Astronomical Journal. This replacement contains a few minor revision
Diameters of Open Star Clusters
The present paper presents a tabulation of data on all 600 Galactic open
clusters for which it is presently possible to calculate linear diameters. As
expected, the youngest `clusters' with ages < 15 Myr, contain a significant
(greater than or equal to 20%) admixture of associations. Among
intermediate-age clusters, with ages in the range 15 Myr to 1.5 Gyr, the median
cluster diameter is found to increase with age. Small compact clusters are rare
among objects with ages > 1.5 Gyr. Open clusters with ages > 1 Gyr appear to
form what might be termed a `cluster thick disk', part of which consistst of
objects that were probably captured gravitationally by the main body of the
Galaxy.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in pres
RR Lyrae Variables in the Globular Cluster M55. The First Evidence for Non Radial Pulsations in RR Lyr Stars
We present the results of a photometric study of RR Lyrae variables in the
field of the globular cluster M55. We have discovered nine new RR Lyrae stars,
increasing the number of known variables in this cluster to 15 objects. Five of
the newly discovered variables belong to Bailey type RRc and two to type RRab.
Two background RRab stars are probable members of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy.
Fourier decomposition of the light curves was used to derive basic properties
of the present sample of RR Lyrae variables. From an analysis of the RRc
variables we obtain a mean mass of , luminosity , effective temperature K, and helium
abundance . Based on the colors, periods and metallicities
of the RRab stars we estimate the value of the color excess for M55 to be equal
to . Using this value we derive the colors of the blue and
red edges of the instability strip in M55. The blue edge lies at
mag and the red edge lies at mag. We estimate the values of the
visual apparent and dereddened distance moduli to be and
, respectively. The light curves of three of the RRc variables
exhibit changes in amplitude of over 0.1 mag on the time scale of less than a
week, rather short for the Blazhko effect, but with no evidence for another
radial pulsational frequency. However we do detect other periodicities which
are clearly visible in the light curve after removing variations with the first
overtone radial frequency. This is strong evidence for the presence of
non-radial pulsations, a behavior common for Scuti stars but not yet
observed among RR Lyr variables.Comment: submitted to Astronomical Journal, 33 pages with 11 figure
The unusually large population of Blazhko variables in the globular cluster NGC 5024 (M53)
We report the discovery of amplitude and phase modulations typical of the
Blazhko effect in 22 RRc and 9 RRab type RR Lyrae stars in NGC 5024 (M53). This
brings the confirmed Blazhko variables in this cluster to 23 RRc and 11 RRab,
that represent 66% and 37% of the total population of RRc and RRab stars in the
cluster respectively, making NGC 5024 the globular cluster with the largest
presently known population of Blazhko RRc stars. We place a lower limit on the
overall incidence rate of the Blazhko effect among the RR Lyrae population in
this cluster of 52%. New data have allowed us to refine the pulsation periods.
The limitations imposed by the time span and sampling of our data prevents
reliable estimations of the modulation periods. The amplitudes of the
modulations range between 0.02 and 0.39 mag. The RRab and RRc are neatly
separated in the CMD, and the RRc Blazhko variables are on averge redder than
their stable couterparts; these two facts may support the hypothesis that the
HB evolution in this cluster is towards the red and that the Blazhko
modulations in the RRc stars are connected with the pulsation mode switch.Comment: ACCEPTED IN MNRAS 14 pages, 9 figures and 6 table
UBV stellar photometry of bright stars in GC M5. I. UV colour-magnitude and colour-colour diagrams and some peculiarities in the HB stellar distribution
We present stellar photometry in the UBV passbands for the globular cluster
M5 = NGC5904. The observations, short-exposured photographic plates and CCD
frames, were obtained in the RC-focus of the 2m telescope of the Natl. Astron.
Obs. 'Rozhen'. All stars in an annulus with radius 1 < r < 5.5 arcmin were
measured. We show that the UV CMDs describe different evolutionary stages in a
better manner than the 'classical' (V, B-V) diagram. We use HB stars, with
known spectroscopic Teff, to check the validity of the colour zero-point. A
review of all known UV-bright star candidates in M5 is made and some of their
parameters are catalogued. Six new stars of this kind are suspected on the
basis of their position on the CMD. New assessment of the cluster reddening and
metallicity is done using the (U-B, B-V) diagram. We find [Fe/H]= -1.38, which
confirms the Zinn & West (1984) value contrasting with recent spectroscopic
estimates. In an effort to clarify the question of the gap in the BHB stellar
distribution and to investigate some other peculiarities, we use the relatively
long-base colour index U-V. A comparison of the unreddened (V, U-V)
distribution of HB stars with a canonical ZAHB model (Dorman et al. 1993)
reveals that the hottest stars rise above the model line. We find this similar
to the 'u-jump' found in the Stroemgren photometry (Grundahl et al. 1998,
1999). (U-B)o indeces of 18 BHB stars with (B-V)o in [-0.02, 0.18] were used to
estimate their ultraviolet deficiency. It is shown that low gravity log g < 2
Kurucz's atmospheric models fit well the observed distribution of these stars
along the two-colour diagram.Comment: 9 pages, 7 EPS figures. MNRAS accepte
The Globular Cluster M15. I. Identification, Discovery, and Period Determination of Variable Stars
We present new CCD photometry for variables in the globular cluster
M15. Our photometry was obtained using both the image subtraction package ISIS
and DAOPHOT/ALLFRAME. The data were acquired in 2001 on two observing runs on
11 observing nights using the 2-m telescope of the Bulgarian National
Astronomical Observatory ``Rozhen'' with a Photometrics CCD camera. For 40
previously known variables, we present a period for the first time, and
improved periods were obtained for many previously known variables. Fourteen
new variables are reported. We present updated Bailey diagrams for the cluster
and discuss its Oosterhoff classification. Although many of M15's RRab
pulsators fall at an intermediate locus between Oosterhoff types I and II in
the Bailey diagram, we argue that M15 is indeed a bona-fide Oosterhoff type IIComment: 48 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
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