34 research outputs found
THE CHEMICAL EVOLUTION OF THE BOOTES I ULTRA-FAINT DWARF GALAXY
We present chemical abundance measurements of two metal-poor red giant stars
in the ultra-faint dwarf galaxy Bootes I, based on Magellan/MIKE
high-resolution spectra. For Boo I-980, with [Fe/H]=-3.1, we present the first
elemental abundance measurements while Boo I-127, with [Fe/H]=-2.0, shows
abundances in good agreement with previous measurements. Light and iron-peak
element abundance ratios in the two Bootes I stars, as well as those of most
other Boootes I members, collected from the literature, closely resemble those
of regular metal-poor halo stars. Neutron-capture element abundances Sr and Ba
are systematically lower than the main halo trend, and also show a significant
abundance spread. Overall, this is similar to what has been found for other
ultra-faint dwarf galaxies. We apply corrections to the carbon abundances
(commensurate with stellar evolutionary status) of the entire sample and find
21% of stars to be carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars, compared to 13%
without using the carbon correction. We reassess the metallicity distribution
functions (MDF) for the CEMP stars and non-CEMP stars, and confirm earlier
claims that CEMP stars might belong to a different, earlier population.
Applying a set of abundance criteria to test to what extent Bootes I could be a
surviving first galaxy suggests that it is one of the earliest assembled
systems that perhaps received gas from accretion from other clouds in the
system, or from swallowing a first galaxy or building block type object. This
resulted in the two stellar populations observable today.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
Improved distances and ages for stars common to TGAS and RAVE
ABSTRACT
We combine parallaxes from the first Gaia data release with the spectrophotometric distance
estimation framework for stars in the fifth RAVE survey data release. The combined distance
estimates are more accurate than either determination in isolation â uncertainties are on average
two times smaller than for RAVE-only distances (three times smaller for dwarfs), and 1.4 times
smaller than TGAS parallax uncertainties (two times smaller for giants). We are also able to
compare the estimates from spectrophotometry to those from Gaia, and use this to assess the
reliability of both catalogues and improve our distance estimates.We find that the distances to
the lowest log g stars are, on average, overestimated and caution that they may not be reliable.
We also find that it is likely that the Gaia random uncertainties are smaller than the reported
values. As a byproduct we derive ages for the RAVE stars, many with relative uncertainties less
than 20 percent. These results for 219 566 RAVE sources have been made publicly available,
and we encourage their use for studies that combine the radial velocities provided by RAVE
with the proper motions provided by Gaia. A sample that we believe to be reliable can be
found by taking only the stars with the flag notification âflag_any=0â.
Key words: Galaxy: fundamental parameters â methods: statistical âFunding for the research in this study came from the Swedish National Space Board, the Royal Physiographic Society in Lund, and some of the computations were performed on resources provided by the Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing (SNIC) at Lunarc under project SNIC 2016/4-17. Funding for RAVE has been provided by: the Australian Astronomical Observatory; the Leibniz-Institut fuer Astrophysik Potsdam (AIP); the Australian National University; the Australian Research Council; the French National Research Agency; the German Research Foundation (SPP 1177 and SFB 881); the European Research Council (ERC-StG 240271 Galactica); the Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica at Padova; The Johns Hopkins University; the National Science Foundation of the USA (AST-0908326); the W. M. Keck foundation; the Macquarie University; the Netherlands Research School for Astronomy; the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; the Slovenian Research Agency (research core funding No. P1-0188); the Swiss National Science Foundation; the Science & Technology Facilities Council of the UK; Opticon; Strasbourg Observatory; and the Universities of Groningen, Heidelberg and Sydney. The RAVE web site is https://www.rave-survey.org. This work has made use of data from the European Space Agency (ESA) mission Gaia (https://www.cosmos.esa.int/gaia), processed by the Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC; https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/dpac/consortium). Funding for the DPAC has been provided by national institutions, in particular the institutions participating in the Gaia Multilateral Agreement
CHROMOSPHERICALLY ACTIVE STARS in the RAVE SURVEY. II. YOUNG DWARFS in the SOLAR NEIGHBORHOOD
© 2017. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. A large sample of over 38,000 chromospherically active candidate solar-like stars and cooler dwarfs from the RAVE survey is addressed in this paper. An improved activity identification with respect to the previous study was introduced to build a catalog of field stars in the solar neighborhood with an excess emission flux in the calcium infrared triplet wavelength region. The central result of this work is the calibration of the age-activity relation for main-sequence dwarfs in a range from a few 10 Myr up to a few Gyr. It enabled an order of magnitude age estimation of the entire active sample. Almost 15,000 stars are shown to be younger than 1 Gyr and âŒ2000 younger than 100 Myr. The young age of the most active stars is confirmed by their position off the main sequence in the J - K versus N UV - V diagram showing strong ultraviolet excess, mid-infrared excess in the J - K versus W 1 - W 2 diagram, and very cool temperatures (J - K < 0.7). They overlap with the reference pre-main-sequence RAVE stars often displaying X-ray emission. The activity level increasing with the color reveals their different nature from the solar-like stars and probably represents an underlying dynamo-generating magnetic fields in cool stars. Of the RAVE objects from DR5, 50% are found in the TGAS catalog and supplemented with accurate parallaxes and proper motions by Gaia. This makes the database of a large number of young stars in a combination with RAVE's radial velocities directly useful as a tracer of the very recent large-scale star formation history in the solar neighborhood. The data are available online in the Vizier database
Chemical gradients in the Milky Way from the RAVE data II. Giant stars
Aims: We provide new constraints on the chemo-dynamical models of the Milky Way by measuring the radial and vertical chemical
gradients for the elements Mg, Al, Si, Ti, and Fe in the Galactic disc and the gradient variations as a function of the distance from the
Galactic plane (Z).
Methods: We selected a sample of giant stars from the RAVE database using the gravity criterium 1.7 < log g < 2.8. We created a
RAVE mock sample with the Galaxia code based on the Besançon model and selected a corresponding mock sample to compare
the model with the observed data. We measured the radial gradients and the vertical gradients as a function of the distance from the
Galactic plane Z to study their variation across the Galactic disc.
Results: The RAVE sample exhibits a negative radial gradient of d[Fe/H]/dR = â0.054 dex kpcâ1 close to the Galactic plane
(|Z| < 0.4 kpc) that becomes flatter for larger |Z|. Other elements follow the same trend although with some variations from element to element. The mock sample has radial gradients in fair agreement with the observed data. The variation of the gradients with
Z shows that the Fe radial gradient of the RAVE sample has little change in the range |Z| 0.6 kpc and then flattens. The iron vertical
gradient of the RAVE sample is slightly negative close to the Galactic plane and steepens with |Z|. The mock sample exhibits an
iron vertical gradient that is always steeper than the RAVE sample. The mock sample also shows an excess of metal-poor stars in
the [Fe/H] distributions with respect to the observed data. These discrepancies can be reduced by decreasing the number of thick disc
stars and increasing their average metallicity in the Besançon model
Galactic kinematics from RAVE to Gaia-RVS Data
RAVE data has provided new results on Galactic kinematics like the kinematical decomposition of the Galactic disk. This decomposition permits to identify the different components of the disk and to characterize them in terms of scale height and scale length. With the data provided by Gaia and in particular the RVS, we will have a completly renewed view of the Galaxy. The precision of the RVS will permit to undertake a precise analysis of the kinematics of the Galactic disks. This knowledge will provide significant clues to constrain the scenarios of the Galactic disk formation
Chromospherically Active Stars in the RAVE Survey. II. Young dwarfs in the Solar neighborhood
A large sample of over 38,000 chromospherically active candidate solar-like stars and cooler dwarfs from the RAVE survey is addressed in this paper. An improved activity identification with respect to the previous study was introduced to build a catalog of field stars in the Solar neighborhood with an excess emission flux in the calcium infrared triplet wavelength region. The central result of this work is the calibration of the age--activity relation for the main sequence dwarfs in a range from a few up to a few Gyr. It enabled an order of magnitude age estimation of the entire active sample. Almost 15,000 stars are shown to be younger than and 2000 younger than . The young age of the most active stars is confirmed by their position off the main sequence in the versus diagram showing strong ultraviolet excess, mid-infrared excess in the versus diagram and very cool temperatures (). They overlap with the reference pre-main sequence RAVE stars often displaying X-ray emission. The activity level increasing with the color reveals their different nature from the solar-like stars and probably represents an underlying dynamo generating magnetic fields in cool stars. 50\% of the RAVE objects from DR5 are found in the TGAS catalog and supplemented with accurate parallaxes and proper motions by Gaia. This makes the database of a large number of young stars in a combination with RAVE's radial velocities directly useful as a tracer of the very recent large-scale star formation history in the Solar neighborhood. The data are available online in the Vizier database
The R-Process Alliance: Fourth Data Release from the Search for R-process-enhanced Stars in the Galactic Halo
This compilation is the fourth data release from the R-Process Alliance (RPA) search for r-process-enhanced stars and the second release based on "snapshot" high-resolution (R ~ 30,000) spectra collected with the du Pont 2.5 m Telescope. In this data release, we propose a new delineation between the r-I and r-II stellar classes at , instead of the empirically chosen level previously in use, based on statistical tests of the complete set of RPA data released to date. We also statistically justify the minimum level of [Eu/Fe] for definition of the r-I stars, [Eu/Fe] > +0.3. Redefining the separation between r-I and r-II stars will aid in the analysis of the possible progenitors of these two classes of stars and determine whether these signatures arise from separate astrophysical sources at all. Applying this redefinition to previous RPA data, the number of identified r-II and r-I stars changes to 51 and 121, respectively, from the initial set of data releases published thus far. In this data release, we identify 21 new r-II, 111 new r-I (plus 3 re-identified), and 7 new (plus 1 re-identified) limited-r stars out of a total of 232 target stars, resulting in a total sample of 72 new r-II stars, 232 new r-I stars, and 42 new limited-r stars identified by the RPA to date
A search for new members of the ÎČ Pictoris, TucanaâHorologium and Δ Cha moving groups in the RAVE data base
We report on the discovery of new members of nearby young moving groups, exploiting the full power of combining the Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) survey with several stellar age diagnostic methods and follow-up high-resolution optical spectroscopy. The results include the identification of one new and five likely members of the ÎČ Pictoris moving group, ranging from spectral types F9 to M4 with the majority being M dwarfs, one K7 likely member of the Δ Cha group and two stars in the TucanaâHorologium association. Based on the positive identifications, we foreshadow a great potential of the RAVE data base in progressing towards a full census of young moving groups in the solar neighbourhood
A review of elliptical and disc galaxy structure, and modern scaling laws
A century ago, in 1911 and 1913, Plummer and then Reynolds introduced their
models to describe the radial distribution of stars in `nebulae'. This article
reviews the progress since then, providing both an historical perspective and a
contemporary review of the stellar structure of bulges, discs and elliptical
galaxies. The quantification of galaxy nuclei, such as central mass deficits
and excess nuclear light, plus the structure of dark matter halos and cD galaxy
envelopes, are discussed. Issues pertaining to spiral galaxies including dust,
bulge-to-disc ratios, bulgeless galaxies, bars and the identification of
pseudobulges are also reviewed. An array of modern scaling relations involving
sizes, luminosities, surface brightnesses and stellar concentrations are
presented, many of which are shown to be curved. These 'redshift zero'
relations not only quantify the behavior and nature of galaxies in the Universe
today, but are the modern benchmark for evolutionary studies of galaxies,
whether based on observations, N-body-simulations or semi-analytical modelling.
For example, it is shown that some of the recently discovered compact
elliptical galaxies at 1.5 < z < 2.5 may be the bulges of modern disc galaxies.Comment: Condensed version (due to Contract) of an invited review article to
appear in "Planets, Stars and Stellar
Systems"(www.springer.com/astronomy/book/978-90-481-8818-5). 500+ references
incl. many somewhat forgotten, pioneer papers. Original submission to
Springer: 07-June-201