1,701 research outputs found
Comparison between Observed and Theoretical Red Giant Branch Luminosity Functions of Galactic Globular Clusters
V-band luminosity functions have been obtained for the upper main-sequence,
sub-giant branch and red giant branch of 18 galactic globular clusters from HST
data. A comparison with four sets of theoretical models has been performed. In
contrast with what was found in several previous works, a Good general
agreement has been found between the observed and theoretical LF at any
metallicity [M/H]<-0.7. Possible discrepancies at higher metallicity, in the
upper part of the RGB, need to be confirmed with further observational data and
by extending all the models to the most metal rich regime. The SGB shape has
been used to set an upper limit to the cluster age, and consequently a lower
limit on the cluster distance. A discussion on the still open problem of the
mismatch between the observed and theoretical RGB bump location is also
presented.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Abundances of disk and bulge giants from hi-res optical spectra: II. O, Mg, Ca, and Ti in the bulge sample
Determining elemental abundances of bulge stars can, via chemical evolution
modeling, help to understand the formation and evolution of the bulge. Recently
there have been claims both for and against the bulge having a different
[/Fe] vs. [Fe/H]-trend as compared to the local thick disk possibly
meaning a faster, or at least different, formation time scale of the bulge as
compared to the local thick disk. We aim to determine the abundances of oxygen,
magnesium, calcium, and titanium in a sample of 46 bulge K-giants, 35 of which
have been analyzed for oxygen and magnesium in previous works, and compare them
to homogeneously determined elemental abundances of a local disk sample of 291
K-giants. We use spectral synthesis to determine both the stellar parameters as
well as the elemental abundances of the bulge stars analyzed here. The method
is exactly the same as was used for analyzing the comparison sample of 291
local K-giants in Paper I of this series. Compared to the previous analysis of
the 35 stars in our sample, we find lower [Mg/Fe] for [Fe/H]>-0.5, and
therefore contradict the conclusion about a declining [O/Mg] for increasing
[Fe/H]. We instead see a constant [O/Mg] over all the observed [Fe/H] in the
bulge. Furthermore, we find no evidence for a different behavior of the
alpha-iron trends in the bulge as compared to the local thick disk from our two
samples.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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&
Galactic Globular Clusters as a test for Very Low-Mass stellar models
We make use of the Next Generation model atmospheres by Allard et al. (1997)
and Hauschildt, Allard & Baron (1999) to compute theoretical models for low and
very low-mass stars for selected metallicities in the range Z= 0.0002 to 0.002.
On this basis, we present theoretical predictions covering the sequence of
H-burning stars as observed in galactic globulars from the faint end of the
Main Sequence up to, and beyond, the cluster Turn Off. The role played by the
new model atmospheres is discussed, showing that present models appear in
excellent agreement with models by Baraffe et al. (1997) as computed on quite
similar physical basis. One finds that the theoretical mass-luminosity
relations based on this updated set of models, are in good agreement with the
empirical data provided by Henry & McCarthy (1993). Comparison with HST
observation discloses that the location in the Color-Magnitude diagram of the
lower Main Sequence in galactic globular clusters appears again in good
agreement with the predicted sensitive dependence of these sequences on the
cluster metallicity.Comment: accepted for pubblication on MNRA
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
Time-Series BVI Photometry for the Globular Cluster NGC 6981 (M72)
We present new BVI photometry of the globular cluster NGC 6981 (M72), based
mostly on ground-based CCD archive images. We present a new color-magnitude
diagram (CMD) that reaches almost four magnitudes below the turn-off level. We
performed new derivations of metallicity and morphological parameters of the
evolved sequences, in good agreement with previous authors, obtaining a value
of [Fe/H] ~ -1.50 in the new UVES scale. We also identify the cluster's blue
straggler population. Comparing the radial distribution of these stars with the
red giant branch population, we find that the blue stragglers are more
centrally concentrated, as found in previous studies of blue stragglers in
globular clusters. Taking advantage of the large field of view covered by our
study, we analyzed the surface density profile of the cluster, finding
extratidal main sequence stars out to r ~ 14.1 arcmin or about twice the tidal
radius. We speculate that this may be due to tidal disruption in the course of
M72's orbit, in which case tidal tails associated with the cluster may exist.
We also take a fresh look at the variable stars in the cluster, recovering all
previous known variables, including three SX Phoenicis stars, and adding three
previously unknown RR Lyrae (1 c-type and 2 ab-type) to the total census.
Finally, comparing our CMD with unpublished data for M3 (NGC 5272), a cluster
with similar metallicity and horizontal branch morphology, we found that both
objects are essentially coeval.Comment: Accepted for publication in A
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