52 research outputs found
The metallicity and distance of Leo A from blue supergiants
We have obtained high-quality spectra of blue supergiant candidates in the
dwarf irregular galaxy Leo A with the Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer at
the Keck I telescope. From the quantitative analysis of seven B8-A0 stars we
derive a mean metallicity [Z] = -1.35 +/- 0.08, in excellent agreement with the
gas-phase chemical abundance. From the stellar parameters and the
flux-weighted-luminosity relation (FGLR) we derive a spectroscopic distance
modulus m-M = 24.77 +/- 0.11 mag, significantly larger (~0.4 mag) than the
value indicated by RR Lyrae and other stellar indicators. We explain the bulk
of this discrepancy with blue loop stellar evolution at very low metallicity
and show that the combination of metallicity effects and blue loop evolution
amounts, in the case of Leo A, to a ~0.35 mag offset of the FGLR to fainter
bolometric luminosities. We identify one outlier of low bolometric magnitude as
a post-AGB star. Its metallicity is consistent with that of the young
population, confirming the slow chemical enrichment of Leo A.Comment: Accepted for publication by The Astrophysical Journal. 15 pages, 12
figures. Updated figure (Fig. 9
The metallicity and distance of NGC 2403 from blue supergiants
We present the first quantitative spectral analysis of blue supergiant stars
in the nearby galaxy NGC 2403. Out of a sample of 47 targets observed with the
LRIS spectrograph at the Keck I telescope we have extracted 16 B- and A-type
supergiants for which we have data of sufficient quality to carry out a
comparison with model spectra of evolved massive stars and infer the stellar
parameters. The radial metallicity gradient of NGC 2403 that we derive has a
slope of -0.14 (+/- 0.05) dex/r_e, and is in accordance with the analysis of H
II region oxygen abundances. We present evidence that the stellar metallicities
that we obtain in extragalactic systems in general agree with the nebular
abundances based on the analysis of the auroral lines, over more than one order
of magnitude in metallicity. Adopting the known relation between stellar
parameters and intrinsic luminosity we find a distance modulus m-M = 27.38 +/-
0.08 mag. While this can be brought into agreement with Cepheid-based
determinations, it is 0.14 mag short of the value measured from the tip of the
red giant branch. We update the mass-metallicity relation secured from chemical
abundance studies of stars in resolved star-forming galaxies.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
A Direct Stellar Metallicity Determination in the Disk of the Maser Galaxy NGC4258
We present the first direct determination of a stellar metallicity in the
spiral galaxy NGC4258 (D=7.6 Mpc) based on the quantitative analysis of a
low-resolution (~5 AE) Keck LRIS spectrum of a blue supergiant star located in
its disk. A determination of stellar metallicity in this galaxy is important
for the absolute calibration of the Cepheid Period-Luminosity relation as an
anchor for the extragalactic distance scale and for a better characterization
of its dependence as a function of abundance. We find a value 0.2 dex lower
than solar metallicity at a galactocentric distance of 8.7 kpc, in agreement
with recent HII region studies using the weak forbidden auroral oxygen line at
4363 AE. We determine the effective stellar temperature, gravity, luminosity
and line-of-sight extinction of the blue supergiant being studied. We show that
it fits well on the flux-weighted gravity--luminosity relation (FGLR),
strengthening the potential of this method as a new extragalactic distance
indicator.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ Letters, 5 pages, 5 figure
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