1,246 research outputs found
The Luminosity and Mass Function of the Globular Cluster NGC1261
I-band CCD images of two large regions of the Galactic globular cluster NGC
1261 have been used to construct stellar luminosity functions (LF) for 14000
stars in three annuli from 1.4' from the cluster center to the tidal radius.
The LFs extend to M_I~8 and tend to steepen from the inner to the outer
annulus, in agreement with the predictions of the multimass King-Michie model
that we have calculated for this cluster. The LFs have been transformed into
mass functions. Once corrected for mass segregation the global mass function of
NGC 1261 has a slope x_0=0.8+/-0.5Comment: 9 pages, A&A macros, accepted for publication in A&
Abundance Patterns in Stars in the Bulge and Galactic Center
We discuss oxygen and iron abundance patterns in K and M red-giant members of
the Galactic bulge and in the young and massive M-type stars inhabiting the
very center of the Milky Way. The abundance results from the different bulge
studies in the literature, both in the optical and the infrared, indicate that
the [O/Fe]-[Fe/H] relation in the bulge does not follow the disk relation, with
[O/Fe] values falling above those of the disk. Based on these elevated values
of [O/Fe] extending to large Fe abundances, it is suggested that the bulge
underwent a rapid chemical enrichment with perhaps a top-heavy initial mass
function. The Galactic Center stars reveal a nearly uniform and slightly
elevated (relative to solar) iron abundance for a studied sample which is
composed of 10 red giants and supergiants. Perhaps of more significance is the
fact that the young Galactic Center M-type stars show abundance patterns that
are reminiscent of those observed for the bulge population and contain enhanced
abundance ratios of alpha-elements relative to either the Sun or Milky Way disk
at near-solar metallicities.Comment: requires iaus.cls; to appear in Formation and Evolution of Galaxy
Bulges, Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 245, 2007, M. Bureau et al. eds., in
pres
Reddening and metallicity maps of the Milky Way bulge from VVV and 2MASS III. The first global photometric metallicity map of the Galactic bulge
We investigate the large scale metallicity distribution in the Galactic
bulge, using a large spatial coverage, in order to constrain the bulge
formation scenario. We use the VISTA variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) survey
data and 2MASS photometry, covering 320 sqdeg of the Galactic bulge, to derive
photometric metallicities by interpolating of the (J-Ks)0 colors of individual
Red Giant Branch stars based on a set of globular cluster ridge lines. We then
use this information to construct the first global metallicity map of the bulge
with a resolution of 30'x45'. The metallicity map of the bulge revealed a clear
vertical metallicity gradient of ~0.04 dex/deg (~0.28 dex/kpc), with metal-rich
stars ([Fe/H]~0) dominating the inner bulge in regions closer to the galactic
plane (|b|<5). At larger scale heights, the mean metallicity of the bulge
population becomes significantly more metal-poor. This fits in the scenario of
a boxy-bulge originated from the vertical inestability of the Galactic bar,
formed early via secular evolution of a two component stellar disk. Older,
metal-poor stars dominate at higher scale heights due to the non-mixed orbits
from the originally hotter thick disk stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
HST NICMOS Photometry of the reddened bulge globular clusters NGC 6528, Terzan 5, Liller 1, UKS 1 and Terzan 4
We present results from NICMOS Hubble Space Telescope observations of the
reddened bulge globular clusters NGC 6528, Terzan 5, Liller 1, UKS 1 and Terzan
4, obtained through the filters F110W and F160W (nearly equivalent to J and H).
For the first time the turnoff region of Liller 1 and the main sequence of
Terzan 5 and Terzan 4 are reached, as well as the horizontal branch of UKS 1.
The magnitude difference between the turnoff and the red horizontal branch
is used as an age indicator. From
comparisons with new isochrones in the NICMOS photometric system, we conclude
that the two metal-rich clusters NGC 6528 and Terzan 5 are coeval within
uncertainties () with 47 Tucanae. Liller 1 and UKS 1 are confirmed as
metal-rich globular clusters. Terzan 4 is confirmed as an interesting case of a
metal-poor cluster in the bulge with a blue horizontal branch.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Red Giant Branch in Near-Infrared Colour-Magnitude Diagrams. II: The luminosity of the Bump and the Tip
We present new empirical calibrations of the Red Giant Branch (RGB) Bump and
Tip based on a homogeneous near-Infrared database of 24 Galactic Globular
Clusters. The luminosities of the RGB Bump and Tip in the J, H and K bands and
their dependence on the cluster metallicity have been studied, yielding
empirical relationships. By using recent transformations between the
observational and theoretical planes, we also derived similar calibrations in
terms of bolometric luminosity. Direct comparison between updated theoretical
models and observations show an excellent agreement. The empirical calibration
of the RGB Tip luminosity in the near-Infrared passbands presented here is a
fundamental tool to derive distances to far galaxies beyond the Local Group, in
view of using the new ground-based adaptive optics facilities and, in the next
future, the James Webb Space Telescope.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Mass Loss From Planetary Nebulae in Elliptical Galaxies
Early-type galaxies possess a dilute hot (2-10E6 K) gas that is probably the
thermalized ejecta of the mass loss from evolving stars. We investigate the
processes by which the mass loss from orbiting stars interacts with the
stationary hot gas for the case of the mass ejected in a planetary nebula
event. Numerical hydrodynamic simulations show that at first, the ejecta
expands nearly symmetrically, with an upstream bow shock in the hot ambient
gas. At later times, the flow past the ejecta creates fluid instabilities that
cause about half of the ejecta to separate and the other half to flow more
slowly downstream in a narrow wake. When radiative cooling is included, most of
the material in the wake (>80%) remains below 1E5 K while the separated ejecta
is hotter (1E5-1E6 K). The separated ejecta is still less than one-quarter the
temperature of the ambient medium and the only way it will reach the
temperature of the ambient medium is through turbulent mixing (after the
material has left the grid). These calculations suggest that a significant
fraction of the planetary nebula ejecta may not become part of the hot ambient
material. This is in contrast to our previous calculations for continuous mass
loss from giant stars in which most of the mass loss became hot gas. We
speculate that detectable OVI emission may be produced, but more sophisticated
calculations will be required to determine the emission spectrum and to better
define the fraction of cooled material.Comment: 34 pages with 20 figures. Higher quality figures are in the ApJ
versio
Photometry of the Globular Cluster NGC 5466: Red Giants and Blue Stragglers
We present wide-field BVI photometry for about 11,500 stars in the
low-metallicity cluster NGC 5466. We have detected the red giant branch bump
for the first time, although it is at least 0.2 mag fainter than expected
relative to the turnoff. The number of red giants (relative to main sequence
turnoff stars) is in excellent agreement with stellar models from the
Yonsei-Yale and Teramo groups, and slightly high compared to Victoria-Regina
models. This adds to evidence that an abnormally large ratio of red giant to
main-sequence stars is not correlated with cluster metallicity. We discuss
theoretical predictions from different research groups and find that the
inclusion or exclusion of helium diffusion and strong limit Coulomb
interactions may be partly responsible.
We also examine indicators of dynamical history: the mass function exponent
and the blue straggler frequency. NGC 5466 has a very shallow mass function,
consistent with large mass loss and recently-discovered tidal tails. The blue
straggler sample is significantly more centrally concentrated than the HB or
RGB stars. We see no evidence of an upturn in the blue straggler frequency at
large distances from the center. Dynamical friction timescales indicate that
the stragglers should be more concentrated if the cluster's present density
structure has existed for most of its history. NGC 5466 also has an unusually
low central density compared to clusters of similar luminosity. In spite of
this, the specific frequency of blue stragglers that puts it right on the
frequency -- cluster M_V relation observed for other clusters.Comment: 51 pages, 21 figures, 1 electronic table, accepted to Ap
High-precision astrometry with VVV. I. An independent reduction pipeline for VIRCAM@VISTA
We present a new reduction pipeline for the VIRCAM@VISTA detector and
describe the method developed to obtain high-precision astrometry with the
VISTA Variables in the V\'ia L\'actea (VVV) data set. We derive an accurate
geometric-distortion correction using as calibration field the globular cluster
NGC 5139, and showed that we are able to reach a relative astrometric precision
of about 8 mas per coordinate per exposure for well-measured stars over a field
of view of more than 1 square degree. This geometric-distortion correction is
made available to the community. As a test bed, we chose a field centered
around the globular cluster NGC 6656 from the VVV archive and computed proper
motions for the stars within. With 45 epochs spread over four years, we show
that we are able to achieve a precision of 1.4 mas/yr and to isolate each
population observed in the field (cluster, Bulge and Disk) using proper
motions. We used proper-motion-selected field stars to measure the motion
difference between Galactic disk and bulge stars. Our proper-motion
measurements are consistent with UCAC4 and PPMXL, though our errors are much
smaller. Models have still difficulties in reproducing the observations in this
highly-reddened Galactic regions.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures (some in low res), 1 table. Accepted for
publication in MNRAS on March 25, 2015. The FORTRAN routine will be soon made
available at http://groups.dfa.unipd.it/ESPG/ , and via email request to the
first autho
Chemical composition of stellar populations in Omega Centauri
We derive abundances of Fe, Na, O, and s-elements from GIRAFFE@VLT spectra
for more than 200 red giant stars in the Milky Way satellite Omega Centauri.
Our preliminary results are that: (i) we confirm that Omega Centauri exibiths
large star-to-star metallicity variations ( 1.4 dex); (ii) the
metallicity distribution reveals the presence of at least five stellar
populations with different [Fe/H]; (iii) a clear Na-O anticorrelation is
clearly observed for the metal-poor and metal-intermediate populations while
apparently the anticorrelation disappears for the most metal-rich populations.
Interestingly the Na level grows with iron.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of IAU Symp. 268
"Light elements in the Universe" (C. Charbonnel, M. Tosi, F. Primas, C.
Chiappini, eds., Cambridge Univ. Press
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