1,586 research outputs found
Deep Hubble Space Telescope/ACS Observations of I Zw 18: a Young Galaxy in Formation
We present V and I photometry of the resolved stars in the most
metal-deficient blue compact dwarf galaxy known, I Zw 18 (Zsun/50), using
Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) images, the deepest
ones ever obtained for this galaxy. The resulting I vs. V-I color-magnitude
diagram (CMD) reaches limiting magnitudes V=I=29 mag. It reveals a young
stellar population of blue main-sequence (MS) stars (age <30 Myr) and blue and
red supergiants (10 Myr<age<100 Myr), but also an older evolved population of
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars (100 Myr<age<500 Myr). We derive a distance
to I Zw 18 in the range 12.6 Mpc - 15 Mpc from the brightness of its AGB stars,
with preferred values in the higher range. The red giant branch (RGB) stars are
conspicuous by their absence, although, for a distance of I Zw 18 <15 Mpc, our
imaging data go ~ 1-2 mag below the tip of the RGB. Thus, the most evolved
stars in the galaxy are not older than 500 Myr and I Zw 18 is a bona fide young
galaxy. Several star formation episodes can be inferred from the CMDs of the
main body and the C component. There have been respectively three and two
episodes in these two parts, separated by periods of ~ 100-200 Myr. In the main
body, the younger MS and massive post-MS stars are distributed over a larger
area than the older AGB stars, suggesting that I Zw 18 is still forming from
the inside out. In the C component, different star formation episodes are
spatially distinct, with stellar population ages decreasing from the northwest
to the southeast, also suggesting the ongoing build-up of a young galaxy.Comment: 29 pages, 13 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
A spectroscopic study of component C and the extended emission around I Zw 18
Long-slit Keck II, 4m Kitt Peak, and 4.5m MMT spectrophotometric data are
used to investigate the stellar population and the evolutionary status of I Zw
18C, the faint C component of the nearby blue compact dwarf galaxy I Zw 18.
Hydrogen H and H emission lines are detected in the spectra of I
Zw 18C, implying that ionizing massive stars are present. High signal-to-noise
Keck II spectra of different regions in I Zw 18C reveal H, H
and higher order hydrogen lines in absorption. Several techniques are used to
constrain the age of the stellar population in I Zw 18C. Ages derived from two
different methods, one based on the equivalent widths of the H,
H emission lines and the other on H, H absorption lines
are consistent with a 15 Myr instantaneous burst model. We find that a small
extinction in the range = 0.20 -- 0.65 mag is needed to fit the observed
spectral energy distribution of I Zw 18C with that model. In the case of
constant star formation, all observed properties are consistent with stars
forming continuously between ~ 10 Myr and < 100 Myr ago. We use all available
observational constraints for I Zw 18C, including those obtained from Hubble
Space Telescope color-magnitude diagrams, to argue that the distance to I Zw 18
should be as high as ~ 15 Mpc. The deep spectra also reveal extended ionized
gas emission around I Zw 18. H emission is detected as far as 30" from
it. To a B surface brightness limit of ~ 27 mag arcsec we find no
observational evidence for extended stellar emission in the outermost regions,
at distances > 15" from I Zw 18.Comment: 38 pages, 11 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Luminous Blue Variable Stars In The Two Extremely Metal-Deficient Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies DDO 68 and PHL 293B
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of two luminous blue
variable (LBV) stars in two extremely metal-deficient blue compact dwarf (BCD)
galaxies, DDO 68 with 12+logO/H = 7.15 and PHL 293B with 12+logO/H = 7.72.
These two BCDs are the lowest-metallicity galaxies where LBV stars have been
detected, allowing to study the LBV phenomenon in the extremely low metallicity
regime, and shedding light of the evolution of the first generation of massive
stars born from primordial gas. We find that the strong outburst of the LBV
star in DDO 68 occurred sometime between February 2007 and January 2008. We
have compared the properties of the broad line emission in low-metallicity LBVs
with those in higher metallicity LBVs. We find that, for the LBV star in DDO
68, broad emission with a P Cygni profile is seen in both H and He I emission
lines. On the other hand, for the LBV star in PHL 293B, P Cygni profiles are
detected only in H lines. For both LBVs, no heavy element emission line such as
Fe II was detected. The Halpha luminosities of LBV stars in both galaxies are
comparable to the one obtained for the LBV star in NGC 2363 (Mrk 71) which has
a higher metallicity 12+logO/H = 7.89. On the other hand, the terminal
velocities of the stellar winds in both low-metallicity LBVs are high, ~800
km/s, a factor of ~4 higher than the terminal velocities of the winds in
high-metallicity LBVs. This suggests that stellar winds at low metallicity are
driven by a different mechanism than the one operating in high-metallicity
winds.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
HST observations of the cometary blue compact dwarf galaxy UGC 4483: a relatively young galaxy?
We present V and I photometry of the resolved stars in the cometary blue
compact dwarf galaxy UGC 4483 using Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2 (WFPC2) images. The resulting I vs. (V-I) color-magnitude diagram
(CMD) reaches limiting magnitudes V = 27.5 mag and I = 26.5 mag for photometric
errors less than 0.2 mag. It reveals not only a young stellar population of
blue main-sequence stars and blue and red supergiants, but also an older
evolved population of red giant and asymptotic giant branch stars. The measured
magnitude I = 23.65 +/- 0.10 mag of the red giant branch tip results in a
distance modulus (m-M) = 27.63 +/- 0.12, corresponding to a distance of 3.4 +/-
0.2 Mpc. The youngest stars are associated with the bright H II region at the
northern tip of the galaxy. The population of older stars is found throughout
the low-surface-brightness body of the galaxy and is considerably more spread
out than the young stellar population, suggesting stellar diffusion. The most
striking characteristics of the CMD of UGC 4483 are the very blue colors of the
red giant stars and the high luminosity of the asymptotic giant branch stars.
Both of these characteristics are consistent with either: 1) a very low
metallicity ([Fe/H] = -2.4 like the most metal-deficient globular clusters) and
an old age of 10 Gyr, or 2) a higher metallicity ([Fe/H] = -1.4 as derived from
the ionized gas emission lines) and a relatively young age of the oldest
stellar population in UGC 4483, not exceeding ~ 2 Gyr. Thus our data do not
exclude the possibility that UGC 4483 is a relatively young galaxy having
formed its first stars only ~ 2 Gyr ago.Comment: 37 pages, 15 PS figures, to appear in Ap
An imaging and spectroscopic study of the very metal-deficient blue compact dwarf galaxy Tol 1214--277
We present a spectrophotometric study based on VLT/FORS I observations of one
of the most metal-deficient blue compact dwarf (BCD) galaxies known, Tol
1214-277 (Z ~ Zsun/25). The data show that roughly half of the total luminosity
of the BCD originates from a bright and compact starburst region located at the
northeastern tip of a faint dwarf galaxy with cometary appearance. The
starburst has ignited less than 4 Myr ago and its emission is powered by
several thousands O7V stars and ~ 170 late-type nitrogen Wolf-Rayet stars
located within a compact region with < 500 pc in diameter. For the first time
in a BCD, a relatively strong [Fe V] 4227 emission line is seen which together
with intense He II 4686 emission indicates the presence of a very hard
radiation field in Tol 1214-277. We argue that this extraordinarily hard
radiation originates from both Wolf--Rayet stars and radiative shocks in the
starburst region. The structural properties of the low-surface-brightness (LSB)
component underlying the starburst have been investigated by means of surface
photometry down to 28 B mag/sq.arcsec. We find that, for a surface brightness
level fainter than ~ 24.5 B mag/sq.arcsec, an exponential fitting law provides
an adequate approximation to its radial intensity distribution. The broad-band
colors in the outskirts of the LSB component of Tol 1214-277 are nearly
constant and are consistent with an age below one Gyr. This conclusion is
supported by the comparison of the observed spectral energy distribution (SED)
of the LSB host with theoretical SEDs.Comment: 17 pages, 11 Postscript figures, uses emulateapj.sty, to appear in
Astronomical Journa
The Embedded Super Star Cluster of SBS0335-052
We analyze the infrared (6-100 micron) spectral energy distribution of the
blue compact dwarf and metal-poor (Z=Z_solar/41) galaxy SBS0335-052. With the
help of DUSTY (Ivezic et al. 1999), a program that solves the radiation
transfer equations in a spherical environment, we evaluate that the infrared
(IR) emission of SBS0335-052 is produced by an embedded super-star cluster
(SSC) hidden under 10^5 M_solar of dust, causing 30 mag of visual extinction.
This implies that one cannot detect any stellar emission from the 2x10^6
M_solar stellar cluster even at near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. The derived
grain size distribution departs markedly from the widely accepted size
distribution inferred for dust in our galaxy (the so-called MRN distribution,
Mathis et al. 1977), but resembles what is seen around AGNs, namely an absence
of PAH and smaller grains, and grains that grow to larger sizes (around 1
micron). The fact that a significant amount of dust is present in such a
low-metallicity galaxy, hiding from UV and optical view most of the star
formation activity in the galaxy, and that the dust size distribution cannot be
reproduced by a standard galactic law, should be borne in mind when
interpreting the spectrum of primeval galaxies.Comment: 32 pages, 3 figures,accepted for publication in A
New Light on the Stellar Populations in IZw18: Deep Near-Infrared Imaging
We present deep JHK images of IZw18, the most metal-deficient Blue Compact
Dwarf galaxy known, and analyze them in conjunction with archival HST/WFPC2
optical images. To investigate the stellar populations, we have divided the
main body of IZw18 into eight regions, and fit the optical, near-infrared
(NIR), and hybrid optical-NIR colors of these and the C component with
evolutionary synthesis models. The composite best fit is obtained for an age
for evolved stellar populations of <= 200Myr; fits with an older age of <=
500Myr are less likely but possible. Our data show no evidence for stellar
populations in IZw18 older than this, although as much as 22% of the stellar
mass in older stars (4% in J light) could remain undetected. The colors of the
young and intermediate-age stellar populations are significantly affected by
widespread and inhomogeneously distributed ionized gas and dust. Ionized gas
emission is important in every region examined except the NW star cluster.
Extinction is significant in both the NW and SE clusters. Red H-K, B-H, and V-K
colors are not reliable indicators of old stellar populations because ionized
gas emission is also red in these colors. V-I, on the other hand, reliably
separates stars from gas because the former are red (V-I >= 0.4) while the
latter is blue (V-I ~ -0.4).Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (May, 2003
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Proenkephalin A 119-159 (Penkid) Is an Early Biomarker of Septic Acute Kidney Injury: The Kidney in Sepsis and Septic Shock (Kid-SSS) Study
Introduction: Sepsis is the leading cause of acute kidney injury (AKI) in critically ill patients. The Kidney in Sepsis and Septic Shock (Kid-SSS) study evaluated the value of proenkephalin A 119-159 (penkid)âa sensitive biomarker of glomerular function, drawn within 24 hours upon intensive care unit (ICU) admission and analyzed using a chemiluminescence immunoassayâfor kidney events in sepsis and septic shock. Methods: The Kid-SSS study was a substudy of Adrenomedullin and Outcome in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock (AdrenOSS) (NCT02393781), a prospective, observational, multinational study including 583 patients admitted to the intensive care unit with sepsis or septic shock and a validation cohort of 525 patients from the French and euRopean Outcome reGistry in Intensive Care Units (FROG-ICU) study. The primary endpoint was major adverse kidney events (MAKEs) at day 7, composite of death, renal replacement therapy, and persistent renal dysfunction. The secondary endpoints included AKI, transient AKI, worsening renal function (WRF), and 28-day mortality. Results: Median age was 66 years (interquartile range 55â75), and 28-day mortality was 22% (95% confidence interval [CI] 19%â25%). Of the patients, 293 (50.3%) were in shock upon ICU admission. Penkid was significantly elevated in patients with MAKEs, persistent AKI, and WRF (median = 65 [IQR = 45â106] vs. 179 [114â242]; 53 [39â70] vs. 133 [79â196] pmol/l; and 70 [47â121] vs. 174 [93â242] pmol/l, all P < 0.0001), also after adjustment for confounding factors (adjusted odds ratio = 3.3 [95% CI = 1.8â6.0], 3.9 [95% CI = 2.1â7.2], and 3.4 [95% CI = 1.9â6.2], all P < 0.0001). Penkid increase preceded elevation of serum creatinine with WRF and was low in renal recovery. Conclusion: Admission penkid concentration was associated with MAKEs, AKI, and WRF in a timely manner in septic patients
High resolution measurements of carbon monoxide along a late Holocene Greenland ice core: evidence for in situ production
We present high-resolution measurements of carbon monoxide (CO)
concentrations from a shallow ice core of the North Greenland Eemian Ice
Drilling project (NEEM-2011-S1). An optical-feedback cavity-enhanced
absorption spectrometer (OF-CEAS) coupled to a continuous melter system
performed continuous, online analysis during a four-week measurement campaign.
This analytical setup generated stable measurements of CO concentrations
with an external precision of 7.8 ppbv (1Ï), based on repeated
analyses of equivalent ice core sections. However, this first application of
this measurement technique suffered from a poorly constrained procedural
blank of 48 ± 25 ppbv and poor accuracy because an absolute
calibration was not possible. The NEEM-2011-S1 CO record spans 1800 yr and
the long-term trends within the most recent section of this record
(i.e., post 1700 AD) resemble the existing discrete CO measurements from the
Eurocore ice core. However, the CO concentration is highly variable (75â1327 ppbv
range) throughout the ice core with high frequency (annual scale), high
amplitude spikes characterizing the record. These CO signals are too abrupt
and rapid to reflect atmospheric variability and their prevalence largely
prevents interpretation of the record in terms of atmospheric CO variation.
The abrupt CO spikes are likely the result of in situ production occurring
within the ice itself, although the unlikely possibility of CO production
driven by non-photolytic, fast kinetic processes within the continuous
melter system cannot be excluded. We observe that 68% of the CO spikes
are observed in ice layers enriched with pyrogenic aerosols. Such aerosols,
originating from boreal biomass burning emissions, contain organic
compounds, which may be oxidized or photodissociated to produce CO within
the ice. However, the NEEM-2011-S1 record displays an increase of
~0.05 ppbv yr<sup>â1</sup> in baseline CO level prior to 1700 AD (129 m
depth) and the concentration remains elevated, even for ice layers depleted
in dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Thus, the processes driving the likely
in situ production of CO within the NEEM ice may involve multiple, complex
chemical pathways not all related to past fire history and require further investigation
Helium abundance in the most metal-deficient blue compact galaxies: I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052
We present high-quality spectroscopic observations of the two most-metal
deficient blue compact galaxies known, I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052 to determine
the helium abundance. The underlying stellar absorption strongly influences the
observed intensities of He I emission lines in the brightest NW component of I
Zw 18, and hence this component should not be used for primordial He abundance
determination. The effect of underlying stellar absorption, though present, is
much smaller in the SE component. Assuming all systematic uncertainties are
negligible, the He mass fraction derived in this component is Y =
0.243+/-0.007. The high signal-to-noise ratio spectrum (> 100 in the continuum)
of SBS 0335-052 allows us to measure the helium mass fraction with a precision
better than 2% -- 5% in nine different regions along the slit. Assuming all
systematic uncertainties are negligible, the weighted mean He mass fraction in
SBS 0335-052 is Y = 0.2437+/-0.0014 when the three He I 4471, 5876 and 6678
emission lines are used, and is 0.2463+/-0.0015 when the He I 4471 emission
line is excluded. The weighted mean helium mass fraction in the two most
metal-deficient BCGs I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052, Y=0.2462+/-0.0015, after
correction for the stellar He production results in a primordial He mass
fraction Yp = 0.2452+/-0.0015. The derived Yp leads to a baryon-to-photon ratio
of (4.7+/-1.0) 10^{-10}, consistent with the values derived from the primordial
D and 7Li abundances, and supporting the standard big bang nucleosynthesis
theory. For the most consistent set of primordial D, 4He, and 7Li abundances we
derive an equivalent number of light neutrino species 3.0+/-0.3 (95% C.L.).Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures. To appear in Ap
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