65 research outputs found
The Star Formation History of NGC 1705: a Post-Starburst Galaxy on the Verge of Activity
We infer the star formation history in different regions of the blue compact
dwarf NGC 1705 by comparing synthetic color-magnitude diagrams with HST optical
and near-infrared photometry. We find that NGC 1705 is not a young galaxy
because its star formation commenced at least 5 Gyr ago. On the other hand, we
confirm the existence of a recent burst of star formation between 15 and 10 Myr
ago. We also find evidence for new strong activity, which started 3 Myr ago and
is still continuing. The old population is spread across the entire galaxy,
while the young and intermediate stars are more concentrated in the central
regions. We derive an almost continuous star formation with variable rate, and
exclude the presence of long quiescent phases between the episodes during the
last ~1 Gyr. The central regions experienced an episode of star formation of
\~0.07 Msun/yr (for a Salpeter initial mass function [IMF]) 15 to 10 Myr ago.
This coincides with the strong activity in the central super star cluster. We
find a rate of ~0.3 Msun/yr for the youngest ongoing burst which started ~3 Myr
ago. This is higher than in other dwarfs and comparable to the rate of NGC
1569. The star formation rate of earlier episodes is not especially high and
falls in the range 10^{-3}-10^{-1} Msun/yr. The IMF is close to the Salpeter
value or slightly steeper.Comment: 34 pages, including 6 tables and 14 .ps figures (9 in colour), AJ in
pres
Stellar age versus mass of early-type galaxies in the Virgo Cluster
The flux excess of elliptical galaxies in the far-ultraviolet can be
reproduced by population synthesis models when accounting for the population of
old hot helium-burning subdwarf stars. This has been achieved by Han and
coworkers through a quantitative model of binary stellar evolution. Here, we
compare the resulting evolutionary population synthesis model to the GALEX
far-near ultraviolet colors (FUV-NUV) of Virgo cluster early-type galaxies that
were published by Boselli and coworkers. FUV-NUV is reddest at about the
dividing luminosity of dwarf and giant galaxies, and becomes increasingly blue
for both brighter and fainter luminosities. This behavior can be easily
explained by the binary model with a continuous sequence of longer duration and
later truncation of star formation at lower galaxy masses. Thus, in contrast to
previous conclusions, the GALEX data do not require a dichotomy between the
stellar population properties of dwarfs and giants. Their apparently opposite
behavior in FUV-NUV occurs naturally when the formation of hot subdwarfs
through binary evolution is taken into account.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Spectral & Photometric Evolution of Simple Stellar Populations at Various Metallicities
A new set of evolutionary synthesis spectra are presented for {\bf S}imple
{\bf S}tellar {\bf P}opulations ({\bf SSP}s) covering ranges in metallicity
from and ages from yr Gyr. They are based on the most recent isochrones from the Padova
group that extend earlier models by the inclusion of the thermal pulsing AGB
phase for stars in the mass range in
accordance with the fuel consumption theorem. We show that with respect to
earlier models, inclusion of the TP-AGB phase leads to significant changes in
the and colors of SSPs. Using model atmosphere spectra from
Lejeune et al, we calculate the spectral evolution of single burst populations
of various metallicities. Isochrone spectra are convolved with filter response
functions to describe the time evolution of luminosities and colors in various
filter systems. The models and their results are not only intended for use in
the interpretation of star clusters but also for combination with any kind of
dynamical galaxy formation and/or evolution model that contains a star
formation criterion. We also present the time evolution of ejection rates for
gas and metals for two different {\bf I}nitial {\bf M}ass {\bf F}unctions ({\bf
IMF}s) as well as cosmological and evolutionary corrections for all the filters
as a function of redshift and two different cosmologies. Extensive data files
are provided in the electronic version, at CDS, and at our above www-address.Comment: 12 pages, using AA LaTeX vers. 4.01, accepted for A&
A Stellar Population Gradient in VII Zw 403 - Implications for the Formation of Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies
We present evidence for the existence of an old stellar halo in the Blue
Compact Dwarf galaxy VII Zw 403. VII Zw 403 is the first Blue Compact Dwarf
galaxy for which a clear spatial segregation of the resolved stellar content
into a "core-halo" structure is detected. Multicolor HST/WFPC2 observations
indicate that active star formation occurs in the central region, but is
strikingly absent at large radii. Instead, a globular-cluster-like red giant
branch suggests the presence of an old (> 10 Gyr) and metal poor
(=-1.92) stellar population in the halo. While the vast majority of
Blue Compact Dwarf galaxies has been recognized to possess halos of red color
in ground-based surface photometry, our observations of VII Zw 403 establish
for the first time a direct correspondence between a red halo color and the
presence of old, red giant stars. If the halos of Blue Compact Dwarf galaxies
are all home to such ancient stellar populations, then the fossil record
conflicts with delayed-formation scenarios for dwarfs.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Ap
Asiago eclipsing binaries program. I. V432 Aur
The orbit and physical parameters of the previously unsolved eclipsing binary
V432 Aur, discovered by Hipparcos, have been derived with errors better than 1%
from extensive Echelle spectroscopy and B, V photometry. Synthetic spectral
analysis of both components has been performed, yielding T_eff and log g in
close agreement with the orbital solution, a metallicity [Z/Z_sun]=-0.60 and
rotational synchronization for both components. Direct comparison on the
theoretical L, T_eff plane with the Padova evolutionary tracks and isochrones
for the masses of the two components (1.22 and 1.08 M_sun) provides a perfect
match and a 3.75 Gyr age. The more massive and cooler component is approaching
the base of the giant branch and displays a probable pulsation activity with an
amplitude of Delta V = 0.075 mag and Delta rad.vel. = 1.5 km/sec. With a T_eff
= 6080 K it falls to the red of the nearby instability strip populated by delta
Sct and gamma Dor types of pulsating variables. Orbital modeling reveals a
large and bright surface spot on it. The pulsations activity and the large
spot(s) suggest the presence of macro-turbulent motions in its atmosphere. They
reflect in a line broadening that at cursory inspection could be taken as
indication of a rotation faster than synchronization, something obviously odd
for an old, expanding star.Comment: A&A, 11 pages, accepted Jan 7, 200
A Near-Infrared Stellar Census of the Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxy VII~Zw~403
We present near-infrared single-star photometry for the low-metallicity Blue
Compact Dwarf galaxy VII~Zw~403. We achieve limiting magnitudes of
F110W~~25.5 and F160W~~24.5 using one of the NICMOS cameras
with the HST equivalents of the ground-based J and H filters. The data have a
high photometric precision (0.1 mag) and are % complete down to magnitudes
of about 23, far deeper than previous ground-based studies in the near-IR. The
color-magnitude diagram contains about 1000 point sources. We provide a
preliminary transformation of the near-IR photometry into the ground system...Comment: Accepted for publication by the AJ, preprint has 49 pages, 2 tables,
and 16 figure
On the Origin of the UV Upturn in Elliptical Galaxies. I. Sensitivity of UV Population Synthesis to Various Input Parameters
We present models of the late stages of stellar evolution intended to explain
the UV upturn phenomenon in elliptical galaxies. Such models are sensitive to
values of a number of poorly-constrained physical parameters, including
metallicity, age, stellar mass loss, helium enrichment, and the distribution of
stars on the zero age horizontal branch (HB). We explore the sensitivity of the
results to values of these parameters, and reach the following conclusions.
Old, metal rich galaxies, such as giant ellipticals, naturally develop a UV
upturn within a reasonable time scale - less than a Hubble time - without the
presence of young stars. The most likely stars to dominate the UV flux of such
populations are low mass, core helium burning (HB and evolved HB) stars.
Metal-poor populations produce a higher ratio of UV-to-V flux, due to opacity
effects, but only metal-rich stars develop a UV upturn, in which the flux
increases towards shorter UV wavelengths. Model color-magnitude diagrams and
corresponding integrated spectra (for various values of age, metallicity,
helium enrichment, mass loss efficiency, initial mass function, and the HB mass
dispersion factor) are available on S.Y.'s world wide web site
http://shemesh.gsfc.nasa.gov/model.html.Comment: LaTeX, 38p text. 19 postscript Figures and 11 gif figures. PS file
also at http://shemesh.gsfc.nasa.gov/astronomy.html. ApJ, vol 486, in pres
The Dwarf Irregular/Wolf-Rayet Galaxy NGC4214: I. A New Distance, Stellar Content, and Global Parameters
We present the results of a detailed optical and near-IR study of the nearby
star-forming dwarf galaxy NGC4214. We discuss the stellar content, drawing
particular attention to the intermediate-age and/or old field stars, which are
used as a distance indicator. On images obtained with the Hubble Space
Telescope WFPC2 and NICMOS instruments in the equivalents of the V, R, I, J and
H bands, the galaxy is well resolved into stars. We achieve limiting magnitudes
of F814W ~27 in the WF chips and F110W ~25 in the NIC2. The optical and
near-infrared color-magnitude diagrams confirm a core-halo galaxy morphology:
an inner high surface-brightness young population within ~1.5' (~1 kpc) from
the center of the galaxy, where the stars are concentrated in bright complexes
along a bar-like structure; and a relatively low-surface-brightness, field-star
population extending out to at least 8' (7 kpc). The color-magnitude diagrams
of the core region show evidence of blue and red supergiants, main-sequence
stars, asymptotic giant branch stars and blue loop stars. We identify some
candidate carbon stars from their extreme near-IR color. The field-star
population is dominated by the "red tangle", which contains the red giant
branch. We use the I-band luminosity function to determine the distance based
on the tip-of-the-red-giant-branch method: 2.7\pm0.3 Mpc. This is much closer
than the values usually assumed in the literature, and we provide revised
distance dependent parameters such as physical size, luminosity, HI mass and
star-formation rate.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in the July 2002 issue
of AJ. Version with high resolution figures is available at
http://www.astro.spbu.ru/staff/dio/preprints.htm
The evolution of rotating stars
First, we review the main physical effects to be considered in the building
of evolutionary models of rotating stars on the Upper Main-Sequence (MS). The
internal rotation law evolves as a result of contraction and expansion,
meridional circulation, diffusion processes and mass loss. In turn,
differential rotation and mixing exert a feedback on circulation and diffusion,
so that a consistent treatment is necessary.
We review recent results on the evolution of internal rotation and the
surface rotational velocities for stars on the Upper MS, for red giants,
supergiants and W-R stars. A fast rotation is enhancing the mass loss by
stellar winds and reciprocally high mass loss is removing a lot of angular
momentum. The problem of the ``break-up'' or -limit is critically
examined in connection with the origin of Be and LBV stars. The effects of
rotation on the tracks in the HR diagram, the lifetimes, the isochrones, the
blue to red supergiant ratios, the formation of W-R stars, the chemical
abundances in massive stars as well as in red giants and AGB stars, are
reviewed in relation to recent observations for stars in the Galaxy and
Magellanic Clouds. The effects of rotation on the final stages and on the
chemical yields are examined, as well as the constraints placed by the periods
of pulsars. On the whole, this review points out that stellar evolution is not
only a function of mass M and metallicity Z, but of angular velocity
as well.Comment: 78 pages, 7 figures, review for Annual Review of Astronomy and
Astrophysics, vol. 38 (2000
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