707 research outputs found
A spectroscopic study of the globular Cluster NGC 4147
Indexación: Web of ScienceWe present the abundance analysis for a sample of 18 red giant branch stars in the metal-poor globular cluster NGC 4147 based on medium- and high-resolution spectra. This is the first extensive spectroscopic study of this cluster. We derive abundances of C, N, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, Ni, Y, Ba, and Eu. We find a metallicity of [Fe/H] = -1.84 +/- 0.02 and an alpha-enhancement of +0.38 +/- 0.05 (errors on the mean), typical of halo globular clusters in this metallicity regime. A significant spread is observed in the abundances of light elements C, N, O, Na, and Al. In particular, we found an Na-O anticorrelation and Na-Al correlation. The cluster contains only similar to 15 per cent of stars that belong to the first generation (Na-poor and O-rich). This implies that it suffered a severe mass-loss during its lifetime. Its [Ca/Fe] and [Ti/Fe] mean values agree better with the Galactic halo trend than with the trend of extragalactic environments at the cluster metallicity. This possibly suggests that NGC 4147 is a genuine Galactic object at odd with what claimed by some author that proposed the cluster to be member of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. An antirelation between the light s-process element Y and Na may also be present.https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/mnras/stw114
The cosmological Lithium problem outside the Galaxy: the Sagittarius globular cluster M54
The cosmological Li problem is the observed discrepancy between Li abundance,
A(Li), measured in Galactic dwarf, old and metal-poor stars (traditionally
assumed to be equal to the initial value A(Li)_0), and that predicted by
standard Big Bang Nucleosynthesis calculations (A(Li)_{BBN}). Here we attack
the Li problem by considering an alternative diagnostic, namely the surface Li
abundance of red giant branch stars that in a colour magnitude diagram populate
the region between the completion of the first dredge-up and the red giant
branch bump. We obtained high-resolution spectra with the FLAMES facility at
the Very Large Telescope for a sample of red giants in the globular cluster
M54, belonging to the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. We obtain A(Li)=+0.93+-0.11
dex, translating -- after taking into account the dilution due to the dredge
up-- to initial abundances (A(Li)_0) in the range 2.35--2.29 dex, depending on
whether or not atomic diffusion is considered. This is the first measurement of
Li in the Sagittarius galaxy and the more distant estimate of A(Li)_0 in old
stars obtained so far. The A(Li)_0 estimated in M54 is lower by ~0.35 dex than
A(Li)_{BBN}, hence incompatible at a level of ~3sigma. Our result shows that
this discrepancy is a universal problem concerning both the Milky Way and
extra-galactic systems. Either modifications of BBN calculations, or a
combination of atomic diffusion plus a suitably tuned additional mixing during
the main sequence, need to be invoked to solve the discrepancy.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS, 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Ca II TRIPLET SPECTROSCOPY OF SMALL MAGELLANIC CLOUD RED GIANTS. IV. ABUNDANCES FOR A LARGE SAMPLE OF FIELD STARS AND COMPARISON WITH THE CLUSTER SAMPLE
This paper represents a major step forward in the systematic and homogeneous study of Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) star clusters and field stars carried out by applying the calcium triplet technique. We present in this work the radial velocity and metallicity of approximately 400 red giant stars in 15 SMC fields, with typical errors of about 7 km s-1 and 0.16 dex, respectively. We added to this information our previously determined metallicity values for 29 clusters and approximately 350 field stars using the identical techniques. Using this enlarged sample, we analyze the metallicity distribution and gradient in this galaxy. We also compare the chemical properties of the clusters and of their surrounding fields. We find a number of surprising results. While the clusters, taken as a whole, show no strong evidence for a metallicity gradient (MG), the field stars exhibit a clear negative gradient in the inner region of the SMC, consistent with the recent results of Dobbie et al. For distances to the center of the galaxy less than 4\ub0, field stars show a considerably smaller metallicity dispersion than that of the clusters. However, in the external SMC regions, clusters and field stars exhibit similar metallicity dispersions. Moreover, in the inner region of the SMC, clusters appear to be concentrated in two groups: one more metal-poor and another more metal-rich than field stars. Individually considered, neither cluster group presents an MG. Most surprisingly, the MG for both stellar populations (clusters and field stars) appears to reverse sign in the outer regions of the SMC. The difference between the cluster metallicity and the mean metallicity of the surrounding field stars turns out to be a strong function of the cluster metallicity. These results could be indicating different chemical evolution histories for these two SMC stellar populations. They could also indicate variations in the chemical behavior of the SMC in its internal and external regions
Clues on the Galactic evolution of sulphur from star clusters
(Abridged) The abundances of alpha-elements are a powerful diagnostic of the
star formation history and chemical evolution of a galaxy. Sulphur, being
moderately volatile, can be reliably measured in the interstellar medium (ISM)
of damped Ly-alpha galaxies and extragalactic HII regions. Measurements in
stars of different metallicity in our Galaxy can then be readily compared to
the abundances in external galaxies. Such a comparison is not possible for Si
or Ca that suffer depletion onto dust in the ISM. Furthermore, studying sulphur
is interesting because it probes nucleosynthetic conditions that are very
different from those of O or Mg. The measurements in star clusters are a
reliable tracers of the Galactic evolution of sulphur. We find
NLTE=6.11+/-0.04 for M 4, NLTE=7.17+/-0.02 for NGC 2477, and
NLTE=7.13+/-0.06 for NGC 5822. For the only star studied in Trumpler 5 we
find A(S)NLTE=6.43+/-0.03 and A(S)LTE=6.94+/-0.05. Our measurements show that,
by and large, the S abundances in Galactic clusters trace reliably those in
field stars. The only possible exception is Trumpler 5, for which the NLTE
sulphur abundance implies an [S/Fe] ratio lower by roughly 0.4 dex than
observed in field stars of comparable metallicity, even though its LTE sulphur
abundance is in line with abundances of field stars. Moreover the LTE sulphur
abundance is consistent only with the abundance of another alpha-element, Mg,
in the same star, while the low NLTE value is consistent with Si and Ca. The S
abundances in our sample of stars in clusters imply that the clusters are
chemically homogeneous for S within 0.05 dex.Comment: A&A in pres
A double stellar generation in the Globular Cluster NGC6656 (M 22). Two stellar groups with different iron and s-process element abundance
AIMS. In this paper we present the chemical abundance analysis from high
resolution UVES spectra of seventeen bright giant stars of the Globular Cluster
M~22. RESULTS. We obtained an average iron abundance of [Fe/H]=-1.76\pm0.02
(internal errors only) and an \alpha enhancement of 0.36\pm0.04 (internal
errors only). Na and O, and Al and O follow the well known anti-correlation
found in many other GCs. We identified two groups of stars with significantly
different abundances of the s-process elements Y, Zr and Ba. The relative
numbers of the two group members are very similar to the ratio of the stars in
the two SGBs of M22 recently found by Piotto (2009). Y and Ba abundances do not
correlate with Na, O and Al. The s-element rich stars are also richer in iron
and have higher Ca abundances. The results from high resolution spectra have
been further confirmed by lower resolution GIRAFFE spectra of fourteen
additional M22 stars. GIRAFFE spectra show also that the Eu -- a pure r-process
element -- abundance is not related to the iron content. We discuss the
chemical abundance pattern of M22 stars in the context of the multiple stellar
populations in GC scenario.Comment: 17 Pages, 21 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Detailed abundances in stars belonging to ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal galaxies
We report preliminary results concerning the detailed chemical composition of
metal poor stars belonging to close ultra-faint dwarf galaxies (hereafter
UfDSphs). The abundances have been determined thanks to spectra obtained with
X-Shooter, a high efficiency spectrograph installed on one of the ESO VLT
units. The sample of ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal stars have abundance ratios
slightly lower to what is measured in field halo star of the same
metallicity.We did not find extreme abundances in our Hercules stars as the one
found by Koch for his 2 Hercules stars. The synthesis of the neutron capture
elements Ba and Sr seems to originate from the same nucleosynthetic process in
operation during the early stages of the galactic evolution.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure; OMEG11 conference (Tokyo, Nov 2011
Absolute motions of globular clusters. II. [HST astrometry and VLT radial velocities in NGC6397]
In this paper we present a new, accurate determination of the three
components of the absolute space velocity of the Galactic globular cluster
NGC6397 (l 338d, b -12d). We used three HST/WFPC2 fields with multi-epoch
observations to obtain astrometric measurements of objects in three different
fields in this cluster. The identification of 33 background galaxies with sharp
nuclei allowed us to determine an absolute reference point and measure the
absolute proper motion of the cluster. The third component has been obtained
from radial velocities measured on spectra from the multi-fiber spectrograph
FLAMES at UT2-VLT. We find [mu_alpha cos(delta), mu_delta](J2000.0) = [+3.39
+/- 0.15, -17.55 +/- 0.15] mas/yr, and V_rad = +18.36 +/- 0.09 (+/-0.10) km/s.
Assuming a Galactic potential, we calculate the cluster orbit for various
assumed distances, and briefly discuss the implications.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A, on
April 27 200
New HST WFC3/UVIS observations augment the stellar-population complexity of omega Centauri
We used archival multi-band Hubble Space Telescope observations obtained with
the Wide-Field Camera 3 in the UV-optical channel to present new important
observational findings on the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of the Galactic
globular cluster omega Centauri. The ultraviolet WFC3 data have been coupled
with available WFC/ACS optical-band data. The new CMDs, obtained from the
combination of colors coming from eight different bands, disclose an even more
complex stellar population than previously identified. This paper discusses the
detailed morphology of the CMDs.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures (11 in low res), 3 tables. Accepted for
publication in AJ on June 19, 201
Magnon Orbital Angular Momentum of Ferromagnetic Honeycomb and Zig-Zag Lattices
By expanding the gauge for magnon band in harmonics of
momentum , we demonstrate that the only observable
component of the magnon orbital angular momentum is its angular
average over all angles , denoted by . For both the FM honeycomb
and zig-zag lattices, we show that is nonzero in the presence of a
Dzyalloshinzkii-Moriya (DM) interaction. The FM zig-zag lattice model with
exchange interactions provides a new system where the effects of
orbital angular momentum are observable. For the zig-zag model with equal
exchange interactions and along the and axis, the
magnon bands are degenerate along the boundaries of the Brillouin zone with
and the Chern numbers are not well defined. However,
a revised model with lifts those degeneracy and produces
well-defined Chern numbers of for the two magnon bands. When
, the thermal conductivity of the FM zig-zag
lattice is largest for but is still about four times smaller than
that of the FM honeycomb lattice at high temperatures. Due to the removal of
band degeneracies, is slightly enhanced when .Comment: 13 figure
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