105 research outputs found
Classical T-Tauri stars with VPHAS+: II: NGC 6383 in Sh 2-012
This paper presents optical (H)-infrared
(s,3.6--8.0m) photometry, and astrometry of 55 Classical
T-Tauri stars (CTTS) in the star-forming region Sh 2-012, and it's central
cluster NGC 6383. The sample was identified based on photometric H
emission line widths, and has a median age of 2.81.6 Myr, with a mass
range between 0.3-1 . 94% of CTTS with near-infrared cross-matches
fall on the near-infrared T-Tauri locus, with all stars having mid-infrared
photometry exhibiting evidence for accreting circumstellar discs. CTTS are
found concentrated around the central cluster NGC 6383, and towards the bright
rims located at the edges of Sh 2-012. Stars across the region have similar
ages, suggestive of a single burst of star formation. Mass accretion rates
() estimated via H and -band line
intensities show a scatter (0.3 dex) similar to spectroscopic studies,
indicating the suitability of H photometry to estimate
. Examining the variation of
with stellar mass (), we find a smaller intercept in the
- relation than oft-quoted in the literature,
providing evidence to discriminate between competing theories of protoplanetary
disc evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 12 pages, 9 figures; Table 1 is
published in electronic form only along with the source cod
The Magellanic Bridge cluster NGC 796: Deep optical AO imaging reveals the stellar content and initial mass function of a massive open cluster
NGC 796 is a massive young cluster located 59 kpc from us in the diffuse
intergalactic medium of the 1/5-1/10 Magellanic Bridge, allowing to
probe variations in star formation and stellar evolution processes as a
function of metallicity in a resolved fashion, providing a link between
resolved studies of nearby solar-metallicity and unresolved distant metal-poor
clusters located in high-redshift galaxies. In this paper, we present adaptive
optics H imaging of NGC 796 (at 0.5", which is ~0.14 pc at the
cluster distance) along with optical spectroscopy of two bright members to
quantify the cluster properties. Our aim is to explore if star formation and
stellar evolution varies as a function of metallicity by comparing the
properties of NGC 796 to higher metallicity clusters. We find from isochronal
fitting of the cluster main sequence in the colour-magnitude diagram an age of
20 Myr. Based on the cluster luminosity function, we derive a
top-heavy stellar initial mass function (IMF) with a slope =
1.990.2, hinting at an metallicity and/or environmental dependence of the
IMF which may lead to a top-heavy IMF in the early Universe. Study of the
H emission line stars reveals that Classical Be stars constitute a
higher fraction of the total B-type stars when compared with similar clusters
at greater metallicity, providing some support to the chemically homogeneous
theory of stellar evolution. Overall, NGC 796 has a total estimated mass of
990 , and a core radius of 1.40.3 pc which classifies
it as a massive young open cluster, unique in the diffuse interstellar medium
of the Magellanic Bridge.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Contains 14
pages, 11 figures, and 3 table
Pre-main sequence accretion in the low metallicity Galactic star-forming region Sh 2-284
We present optical spectra of pre-main sequence (PMS) candidates around the
H region taken with the Southern African Large Telescope, SALT, in the
low metallicity () Galactic region Sh 2-284, which includes the open cluster
Dolidze 25 with an atypical low metallicity of 1/5 . It
has been suggested on the basis of both theory and observations that PMS
mass-accretion rates, , are a function of . We present
the first sample of spectroscopic estimates of mass-accretion rates for PMS
stars in any low- star-forming region. Our data-set was enlarged with
literature data of H emission in intermediate-resolution R-band
spectroscopy. Our total sample includes 24 objects spanning a mass range
between 1 - 2 and with a median age of approximately 3.5 Myr. The
vast majority (21 out of 24) show evidence for a circumstellar disk on the
basis of 2MASS and Spitzer infrared photometry. We find in
the 1 - 2 interval to depend quasi-quadratically on stellar mass,
with , and inversely
with stellar age .
Furthermore, we compare our spectroscopic measurements with
solar Galactic PMS stars in the same mass range, but, surprisingly find no
evidence for a systematic change in with . We show that
literature accretion-rate studies are influenced by detection limits, and we
suggest that may be controlled by factors other than
, , and age.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Contains 13
pages, 11 figures, 4 table
Pillars of creation amongst destruction: Star formation in molecular clouds near R136 in 30 Doradus
New sensitive CO(2-1) observations of the 30 Doradus region in the Large
Magellanic Cloud are presented. We identify a chain of three newly discovered
molecular clouds we name KN1, KN2 and KN3 lying within 2--14 pc in projection
from the young massive cluster R136 in 30 Doradus. Excited H 2.12m
emission is spatially coincident with the molecular clouds, but ionized
Br emission is not. We interpret these observations as the tails of
pillar-like structures whose ionized heads are pointing towards R136. Based on
infrared photometry, we identify a new generation of stars forming within this
structure.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (includes 13 pages, 8 figures). For
higher resolution figures please see
http://www.das.uchile.cl/~vkalari/staplervk.pd
A CCD Search for Variable Stars in the Open Cluster NGC 6611
We present the results of the variability survey in the young open
cluster NGC 6611 based on observations obtained during 34 nights spanning one
year. In total, we found 95 variable stars. Most of these stars are classified
as periodic and irregular pre-main sequence (PMS) stars. The analysis of the
2MASS photometry and four-colour IRAC photometry revealed 165 Class II
young stellar sources, 20 of which are irregular variables and one is an
eclipsing binary. These classifications, complemented by UKIDSS
photometry and VPHAS photometry, were used to identify 24
candidates for classical T Tauri stars and 30 weak-lined T Tauri stars. In
addition to the PMS variables, we discovered eight Scuti candidates.
None of these were previously known. Furthermore, we detected 17 eclipsing
binaries where two were previously known. Based on the proper motions provided
by the Gaia EDR3 catalogue, we calculated the cluster membership probabilities
for 91 variable stars. For 61 variables, a probability higher than 80% was
determined, which makes them cluster members. Only 25 variables with a
probability less than 20% were regarded to be non-members.Comment: 30 pages, 31 figure
Resolved star formation in the metal poor star-forming region Magellanic Bridge C
Magellanic Bridge C (MB-C) is a metal-poor (1/5 )
low-density star-forming region located 59 kpc away in the Magellanic Bridge,
offering a resolved view of the star formation process in conditions different
to the Galaxy. From Atacama Large Millimetre Array CO (1-0) observations, we
detect molecular clumps associated to candidate young stellar objects (YSOs),
pre-main sequence (PMS) stars, and filamentary structure identified in
far-infrared imaging. YSOs and PMS stars form in molecular gas having densities
between 17-200 pc, and have ages between 0.1-3
Myr. YSO candidates in MB-C have lower extinction than their Galactic
counterparts. Otherwise, our results suggest that the properties and
morphologies of molecular clumps, YSOs, and PMS stars in MB-C present no patent
differences with respect to their Galactic counterparts, tentatively alluding
that the bottleneck to forming stars in regions similar to MB-C is the
conversion of atomic gas to molecular.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 22 pages, 14 fig
The Gaia-ESO Survey: dynamics of ionized and neutral gas in the Lagoon nebula (M8)
We present a spectroscopic study of the dynamics of the ionized and neutral
gas throughout the Lagoon nebula (M8), using VLT/FLAMES data from the Gaia-ESO
Survey. We explore the connections between the nebular gas and the stellar
population of the associated star cluster NGC6530. We characterize through
spectral fitting emission lines of H-alpha, [N II] and [S II] doublets, [O
III], and absorption lines of sodium D doublet, using data from the
FLAMES/Giraffe and UVES spectrographs, on more than 1000 sightlines towards the
entire face of the Lagoon nebula. Gas temperatures are derived from line-width
comparisons, densities from the [S II] doublet ratio, and ionization parameter
from H-alpha/[N II] ratio. Although doubly-peaked emission profiles are rarely
found, line asymmetries often imply multiple velocity components along the line
of sight. This is especially true for the sodium absorption, and for the [O
III] lines. Spatial maps for density and ionization are derived, and compared
to other known properties of the nebula and of its massive stars 9 Sgr,
Herschel 36 and HD 165052 which are confirmed to provide most of the ionizing
flux. The detailed velocity fields across the nebula show several expanding
shells, related to the cluster NGC6530, the O stars 9 Sgr and Herschel 36, and
the massive protostar M8East-IR. The origins of kinematical expansion and
ionization of the NGC6530 shell appear to be different. We are able to put
constrains on the line-of-sight (relative or absolute) distances between some
of these objects and the molecular cloud. The large obscuring band running
through the middle of the nebula is being compressed by both sides, which might
explain its enhanced density. We also find an unexplained large-scale velocity
gradient across the entire nebula. At larger distances, the transition from
ionized to neutral gas is studied using the sodium lines.Comment: 26 pages, 31 figures, accepted on Astronomy and Astrophysics journa
The VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey XIX. B-type Supergiants - Atmospheric parameters and nitrogen abundances to investigate the role of binarity and the width of the main sequence
TLUSTY non-LTE model atmosphere calculations have been used to determine
atmospheric parameters and nitrogen (N) abundances for 34 single and 18 binary
B-type supergiants (BSGs). The effects of flux contribution from an unseen
secondary were considered for the binary sample. We present the first
systematic study of the incidence of binarity for a sample of BSGs across the
theoretical terminal age main sequence (TAMS). To account for the distribution
of effective temperatures of the BSGs it may be necessary to extend the TAMS to
lower temperatures. This is consistent with the derived distribution of mass
discrepancies, projected rotational velocities (vsini) and N abundances,
provided that stars cooler than this temperature are post RSG objects. For the
BSGs in the Tarantula and previous FLAMES surveys, most have small vsini. About
10% have larger vsini (>100 km/s) but surprisingly these show little or no N
enhancement. All the cooler BSGs have low vsini of <70km/s and high N abundance
estimates, implying that either bi-stability braking or evolution on a blue
loop may be important. A lack of cool binaries, possibly reflects the small
sample size. Single star evolutionary models, which include rotation, can
account for the N enhancement in both the single and binary samples. The
detailed distribution of N abundances in the single and binary samples may be
different, possibly reflecting differences in their evolutionary history. The
first comparative study of single and binary BSGs has revealed that the main
sequence may be significantly wider than previously assumed, extending to
Teff=20000K. Some marginal differences in single and binary atmospheric
parameters and abundances have been identified, possibly implying non-standard
evolution for some of the sample. This sample as a whole has implications for
several aspects of our understanding of the evolution of BSGs. Full abstract in
paperComment: 21 pages, 15 figures, 11 table
The VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey XV. VFTS 822: A candidate Herbig B[e] star at low metallicity
We report the discovery of the B[e] star VFTS 822 in the 30 Doradus star-forming region of the Large Magellanic Cloud, classified by optical spectroscopy from the VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey and complementary infrared photometry. VFTS 822 is a relatively low-luminosity (log L = 4.04 ± 0.25 L⊙) B8[e] star. In this Letter, we evaluate the evolutionary status of VFTS 822 and discuss its
candidacy as a Herbig B[e] star. If the object is indeed in the pre-main sequence phase, it would present an exciting opportunity to
spectroscopically measure mass accretion rates at low metallicity, to probe the effect of metallicity on accretion rates
Estrogens and their precursors in postmenopausal women with early breast cancer receiving anastrozole
PURPOSE: We determined hormone concentrations (estradiol [E2], estrone [E1], estrone conjugates [E1-C], androstenedione [A], testosterone [T]) before and on anastrozole therapy where we also determined plasma concentrations of anastrozole and its metabolites.
EXPERIMENTAL: Postmenopausal women who were to receive adjuvant anastrozole for resected early breast cancer were studied. Pretreatment, blood samples were obtained for the acquisition of DNA and for plasma hormone measurements (E2, E1, E1-C, A, and T). A second blood draw was obtained at least 4 weeks after starting anastrozole for hormone, anastrozole and metabolite measurements. For hormone assays, a validated bioanalytical method using gas chromatography negative ionization tandem mass spectrometry was used. Anastrozole and metabolite assays involved extraction of plasma followed by LC/MS/MS assays.
RESULTS: 649 patients were evaluable. Pretreatment and during anastrozole, there was large inter-individual variability in E2, E1, and E1-C as well as anastrozole and anastrozole metabolite concentrations. E2 and E1 concentrations were below the lower limits of quantitation in 79% and 70%, respectively, of patients on anastrozole therapy, but those with reliable concentrations had a broad range (0.627-234.0 pg/mL, 1.562-183.2 pg/mL, respectively). Considering E2, 8.9% had the same or higher concentration relative to baseline while on anastrozole, documented by the presence of drug.
CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated large inter-individual variability in anastrozole and anastrozole metabolite concentrations as well as E1, E2, E1-C, A, and T concentrations before and while on anastrozole. These findings suggest that the standard 1mg daily dose of anastrozole is not optimal for a substantial proportion of women with breast cancer
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