741 research outputs found
Asymptotic Giant Branch Variables in the Galaxy and the Local Group
AGB variables, particularly the large amplitude Mira type, are a vital step
on the distance scale ladder. They will prove particularly important in the era
of space telescopes and extremely large ground-based telescopes with adaptive
optics, which will be optimized for infrared observing. Our current
understanding of the distances to these stars is reviewed with particular
emphasis on improvements that came from Hipparcos as well as on recent work on
Local Group galaxies. In addition to providing the essential calibration for
extragalactic distances Gaia may also provide unprecedented insight into the
poorly understood mass-loss process itself.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Science. From a
presentation at the conference "The Fundamental Cosmic Distance Scale: State
of the Art and Gaia Perspective, Naples May 2011. 8 Pages, 9 Figure
The APM Survey for Cool Carbon Stars in the Galactic Halo - II The Search for Dwarf Carbon Stars
We present proper motion measurements for carbon stars found during the APM
Survey for Cool Carbon Stars in the Galactic Halo (Totten & Irwin, 1998).
Measurements are obtained using a combination of POSSI, POSSII and UKST survey
plates supplemented where necessary by CCD frames taken at the Isaac Newton
Telescope. We find no significant proper motion for any of the new APM
colour-selected carbon stars and so conclude that there are no dwarf carbon
stars present within this sample. We also present proper motion measurements
for three previously known dwarf carbon stars and demonstrate that these
measurements agree favourably with those previously quoted in the literature,
verifying our method of determining proper motions. Results from a
complimentary program of JHK photometry obtained at the South African
Astronomical Observatory are also presented. Dwarf carbon stars are believed to
have anomalous near-infrared colours, and this feature is used for further
investigation of the nature of the APM carbon stars. Our results support the
use of JHK photomtery as a dwarf/giant discriminator and also reinforce the
conclusion that none of the new APM-selected carbon stars are dwarfs. Finally,
proper motion measurements combined with extant JHK photometry are presented
for a sample of previously known Halo carbon stars, suggesting that one of
these stars, CLS29, is likely to be a previously unrecognised dwarf carbon
star.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, Also
available at http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~ejt/publications.htm
Luminosities of AGB Variables
The prevailing evidence suggests that most large-amplitude AGB variables
follow the period luminosity (PL) relation that has been established for Miras
in the LMC and galactic globular clusters. Hipparcos observations indicate that
most Miras in the solar neighbourhood are consistent with such a relation.
There are two groups of stars with luminosities that are apparently greater
than the PL relation would predict: (1) in the LMC and SMC there are large
amplitude variables, with long periods, P> 420 days, which are probably
undergoing hot bottom burning, but which are very clearly more luminous than
the PL relation (these are visually bright and are likely to be among the first
stars discovered in more distant intermediate age populations); (2) in the
solar neighbourhood there are short period, P<235 days, red stars which are
probably more luminous than the PL relation. Similar short-period red stars,
with high luminosities, have not been identified in the Magellanic Clouds.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure, to be published in Mass-Losing Pulsating Stars and
their Circumstellar Matter, Y. Nakada & M. Honma (eds) Kluwer ASSL serie
The Galactic Kinematics of Mira Variables
The galactic kinematics of Mira variables derived from radial velocities,
Hipparcos proper motions and an infrared period-luminosity relation are
reviewed. Local Miras in the 145-200day period range show a large asymmetric
drift and a high net outward motion in the Galaxy. Interpretations of this
phenomenon are considered and (following Feast and Whitelock 2000) it is
suggested that they are outlying members of the bulge-bar population and
indicate that this bar extends beyond the solar circle.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure, to be published in Mass-Losing Pulsating Stars and
their Circumstellar Matter, Y. Nakada & M. Honma (eds) Kluwer ASSL serie
Constraints on z~10 Galaxies from the Deepest HST NICMOS Fields
We use all available fields with deep NICMOS imaging to search for J dropouts
(H<28) at z~10. Our primary data set for this search were the two J+H NICMOS
parallel fields taken with the ACS HUDF. The 5 sigma limiting mags were 28.6 in
J and 28.5 in H. Several shallower fields were also used: J+H NICMOS frames
available over the HDF North, the HDF South NICMOS parallel, and the ACS HUDF.
The primary selection criterion was (J-H)>1.8. 11 such sources were found in
all search fields using this criterion. 8 of these were clearly ruled out as
credible z~10 sources, either as a result of detections (>2 sigma) blueward of
J or their colors redward of the break (H-K~1.5). The nature of the 3 remaining
sources could not be determined from the data. The number appears consistent
with the expected contamination from low-z interlopers. Analysis of the stacked
images for the 3 candidates also suggests contamination. Regardless of their
true redshifts, the actual number of z~10 sources must be <=3. To assess the
significance of these results, two lower redshift samples (a z~3.8 B-dropout
and z~6 i-dropout sample) were projected to z~8-12 using a (1+z)^{-1} size
scaling. They were added to the image frames, and the selection repeated,
giving 15.6 and 4.8 J-dropouts, respectively. This suggests that to the limit
of this probe (0.3 L*) there has been evolution from z~3.8 and possibly from
z~6. This is consistent with the strong evolution already noted at z~6 and
z~7.5 relative to z~3-4. Even assuming that 3 sources from this probe are at
z~10, the rest-frame continuum UV (~1500 A) luminosity density at z~10
(integrated down to 0.3 L*) is just 0.19_{-0.09}^{+0.13}x that at z~3.8 (or
0.19_{-0.10}^{+0.15}x including cosmic variance). However, if none of our
sources is at z~10, this ratio has a 1 sigma upper limit of 0.07. (abridged)Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letter
Dust mass-loss rates from AGB stars in the Fornax and Sagittarius dwarf Spheroidal galaxies
To study the effect of metallicity on the mass-loss rate of asymptotic giant
branch (AGB) stars, we have conducted mid-infrared photometric measurements of
such stars in the Sagittarius (Sgr dSph) and Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxies
with the 10-m camera VISIR at the VLT. We derive mass-loss rates for 29
AGB stars in Sgr dSph and 2 in Fornax. The dust mass-loss rates are estimated
from the and colours. Radiative transfer models are used to
check the consistency of the method. Published IRAS and Spitzer data confirm
that the same tight correlation between colour and dust mass-loss
rates is observed for AGB stars from galaxies with different metallicities,
i.e. the Galaxy, the LMC and the SMC.
The derived dust mass-loss rates are in the range 5 to
3 Myr for the observed AGB stars in Sgr dSph
and around 5 Myr for those in Fornax; while
values obtained with the two different methods are of the same order of
magnitude. The mass-loss rates for these stars are higher than the nuclear
burning rates, so they will terminate their AGB phase by the depletion of their
stellar mantles before their core can grow significantly. Some observed stars
have lower mass-loss rates than the minimum value predicted by theoretical
models.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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