2,014 research outputs found
Spectroscopy of Bright QUEST RR Lyrae Stars: Velocity Substructures toward Virgo
Using a sample of 43 bright (V<16.1, distance <13 kpc) RR Lyrae stars (RRLS)
from the QUEST survey with spectroscopic radial velocities and metallicities,
we find that several separate halo substructures contribute to the Virgo
overdensity (VOD). While there is little evidence for halo substructure in the
spatial distribution of these stars, their distribution in radial velocity
reveals two moving groups. These results are reinforced when the sample is
combined with a sample of blue horizontal branch stars that were identified in
the SDSS, and the combined sample provides evidence for one additional moving
group. These groups correspond to peaks in the radial velocity distribution of
a sample of F type main-sequence stars that was recently observed in the same
directon by SEGUE, although in one case the RRLS and F star groups may not lie
at the same distance. One of the new substructures has a very narrow range in
metallicity, which is more consistent with it being the debris from a destroyed
globular cluster than from a dwarf galaxy. A small concentration of stars have
radial velocities that are similar to the Virgo Stellar Stream (VSS) that was
identified previously in a fainter sample of RRLS. Our results suggest that
this feature extends to distances as short as ~12 kpc from its previous
detection at ~19 kpc. None of the new groups and only one star in the sample
have velocities that are consistent with membership in the leading tidal stream
from the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy, which some authors have suggested
is the origin of the VOD.Comment: Accepted for publication in the A
No Excess of RR Lyrae Stars in the Canis Major Overdensity
Our multi-epoch survey of ~20 sq. deg. of the Canis Major overdensity has
detected only 10 RR Lyrae stars (RRLS). We show that this number is consistent
with the number expected from the Galactic halo and thick disk populations
alone, leaving no excess that can be attributed to the dwarf spheroidal (dSph)
galaxy that some authors have proposed as the origin of the CMa overdensity. If
this galaxy resembles the dSph satellites of the Milky Way and of M31 and has
the putative Mv~-14.5, our survey should have detected several tens of RRLS.
Even if Mv10, which is not observed. Either the
old stellar population of this galaxy has unique properties or, as others have
argued before, the CMa overdensity is produced by the thin and thick disk and
spiral arm populations of the Milky Way and not by a collision with a dSph
satellite galaxy.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication at the
Astronomical Journa
Halo Velocity Groups in the Pisces Overdensity
We report spectroscopic observations with the Gemini South Telescope of 5
faint V~20 RR Lyrae stars associated with the Pisces overdensity. At a
heliocentric and galactocentric distance of ~80 kpc, this is the most distant
substructure in the Galactic halo known to date. We combined our observations
with literature data and confirmed that the substructure is composed of two
different kinematic groups. The main group contains 8 stars and has =
50 km/s, while the second group contains four stars at a velocity of
= -52 km/s, where V_{gsr} is the radial velocity in the galactocentric standard
of rest. The metallicity distribution of RR Lyrae stars in the Pisces
overdensity is centered on [Fe/H]=-1.5 dex and has a width of 0.3 dex. The new
data allowed us to establish that both groups are spatially extended making it
very unlikely that they are bound systems, and are more likely to be debris of
a tidally disrupted galaxy or galaxies. Due to small sky coverage, it is still
unclear whether these groups have the same or different progenitors.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, accepted to Astrophysical Journa
Proper Motions in Kapteyn Selected Area 103: A Preliminary Orbit for the Virgo Stellar Stream
We present absolute proper motions in Kapteyn Selected Area (SA) 103. This
field is located 7 degrees west of the center of the Virgo Stellar Stream (VSS,
Duffau et al. 2006), and has a well-defined main sequence representing the
stream. In SA 103 we identify one RR Lyrae star as a member of the VSS
according to its metallicity, radial velocity and distance. VSS candidate
turnoff stars and subgiant stars have proper motions consistent with that of
the RR Lyrae star. The 3D velocity data imply an orbit with a pericenter of 11
kpc and an apocenter of ~90 kpc. Thus, the VSS comprises tidal debris found
near the pericenter of a highly destructive orbit. Examining the six globular
clusters at distances larger than 50 kpc from the Galactic center, and the
proposed orbit of the VSS, we find one tentative association, NGC 2419. We
speculate that NGC 2419 is possibly the nucleus of a disrupted system of which
the VSS is a part.Comment: ApJL accepte
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