2,618 research outputs found
The Stellar Content and the Star Formation History of the Local Group Dwarf Galaxy LGS 3
The star formation history (SFH) and the properties of the dwarf galaxy LGS3
are analyzed using color-magnitude (CM) diagrams plotted from VRI photometry of
736 stars. The distance to the galaxy is estimated through the position of the
tip or the red giant branch. Two acceptable results have been obtained:
0.77+/-0.07 Mpc and 0.96+/-0.07 Mpc, although the first value is favored by
complementary considerations on the stellar content of the galaxy. Both values
make LGS3 a possible satellite of M31 or of M33. The SFH is investigated for
each of the two adopted distances comparing the observed CM diagrams with model
CM diagrams computed for different star formation rates (psi(t)) and chemical
enrichment laws (Z(t)).
The results are compatible with LGS3 having been forming stars since an early
epoch, 15-12 Gyr ago, at an almost constant rate if distance is 0.77 Mpc or at
an exponentially decreasing rate if distance is 0.96 Mpc. According to our
models, the current metallicity would range from Z~0.0007 to Z~0.002. Other
results are the current psi(t): (0.55+/-0.04)x10^(-10) Mo yr^(-1) pc^(-2) or
(0.47+/-0.07)x10^(-10) Mo yr^(-1) pc^(-2), depending of the distance, and its
average for the entire life of the galaxy, =(1.4+/-0.1)x10^(-10) Mo
yr^(-1) pc^(-2). At the present psi(t), the probability of LGS3 having an HII
region is 0.2, which is compatible with the fact that no HII regions have been
found in the galaxy. Its fraction of gas relative to the mass intervening in
the chemical evolution is about 0.40 and its percentage of dark matter (that
which cannot be explained as stellar remnants or by extrapolation of the used
IMF to low masses) is 95%. The results for psi(t) and Z(t) for d=0.77 Mpc are
compatible with a moderate outflow of well mixed material (lambda=3), but largeComment: 23 pages, 3 tables, 14 figures. AJ in pres
Model color-magnitude diagrams for Hubble Space Telescope observations of Local Group dwarf galaxies
In this paper, we discuss a method to conduct a quantitative study of the
star formation history (SFH) of Local Group (LG) galaxies using (HST) data.
This method has proven to be successful in the analysis of the SFH of the same
kind of galaxies using ground-based observations. It is based on the comparison
of observed CMDs with a set of model CMDs. The latter are computed assuming
different evolutionary scenarios, and include a detailed simulation of
observational effects. HST CMDs are ~3 mags deeper than typical ground-based
CMDs, allowing the observation, for all LG galaxies, of a part of the CMD that
up till now had remained accessible only for the very nearest galaxies. A very
important feature that will become accessible is the HB+red-clump. The
distribution of stars along this structure is quite sensitive to age and
metallicity and should provide a very important improvement in the time
resolution of the SFH for stars older than ~2-3 Gyr. We show and discuss four
model CMDs which would be comparable with CMDs from deep HST observations.
These model CMDs represent the following evolutionary scenarios corresponding
to a wide range of dwarf galaxy sub-types from dI to dE: A) a constant SFR from
15Gyr ago to the present time; B) as A), but with the SFR stopped 0.5 Gyr ago;
C) a constant SFR in the age range 10-9Gyr and D) as C) but in the age range
15-12 Gyr. In all four cases a range of metallicity from Z=0.0001 to Z=0.004
has been assumed. The present analysis is just a first qualitative approach to
what one may expect to find in the CMDs of LG galaxies. However a complete set
of model CMDs must be computed to analize the data for each galaxy, using the
crowding effects derived for that particular galaxy.Comment: 2 fi
Probing the Galaxy I. The galactic structure towards the galactic pole
Observations of (B-V) colour distributions towards the galactic poles are
compared with those obtained from synthetic colour-magnitude diagrams to
determine the major constituents in the disc and spheroid. The disc is
described with four stellar sub-populations: the young, intermediate, old, and
thick disc populations, which have respectively scale heights of 100 pc, 250
pc, 0.5 kpc, and 1.0 kpc. The spheroid is described with stellar contributions
from the bulge and halo. The bulge is not well constrained with the data
analyzed in this study. A non-flattened power-law describes the observed
distributions at fainter magnitudes better than a deprojected R^{1/4}-law.
Details about the age, metallicity, and normalizations are listed in Table 1.
The star counts and the colour distributions from the stars in the intermediate
fields towards the galactic anti-centre are well described with the stellar
populations mentioned above. Arguments are given that the actual solar offset
is about 15 pc north from the galactic plane.Comment: 11 pages TeX, 4 separate pages with additional figures, accepted for
publication in A&
GAIA: AGB stars as tracers of star formation histories in the Galaxy and beyond
We discuss the tracing of star formation histories with ESA's space
astrometry mission GAIA, emphasizing the advantages of AGB stars for this
purpose. GAIA's microarcsecond-level astrometry, multi-band photometry and
spectroscopy will provide individual distances, motions, effective
temperatures, gravities and metallicities for vast numbers of AGB stars in the
Galaxy and beyond. Reliable ages of AGB stars can be determined to distances of
\~200 kpc in a wide range of ages and metallicities, allowing star formation
histories to be studied in a diversity of astrophysical environments.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to be appear in 'Mass-Losing Pulsating Stars and
their Circumstellar Matter', eds. Y. Nakada, M. Honma & M. Seki, Kluwer ASSL
series, vol. 28
The Near-Infrared Photometric Properties of Bright Giants in the Central Regions of the Galactic Bulge
Images recorded through broad (J, H, K), and narrow (CO, and 2.2micron
continuum) band filters are used to investigate the photometric properties of
bright (K < 13.5) stars in a 6 x 6 arcmin field centered on the SgrA complex.
The giant branch ridgelines in the (K, J-K) and (K, H-K) color-magnitude
diagrams are well matched by the Baade's Window (BW) M giant sequence if the
mean extinction is A_K ~ 2.8 mag. Extinction measurements for individual stars
are estimated using the M_K versus infrared color relations defined by M giants
in BW, and the majority of stars have A_K between 2.0 and 3.5 mag. The
extinction is locally high in the SgrA complex, where A_K ~ 3.1 mag.
Reddening-corrected CO indices, CO_o, are derived for over 1300 stars with J,
H, and K brightnesses, and over 5300 stars with H and K brightnesses. The
distribution of CO_o values for stars with K_o between 11.25 and 7.25 can be
reproduced using the M_K versus CO_o relation defined by M giants in BW. The
data thus suggest that the most metal-rich giants in the central regions of the
bulge and in BW have similar photometric properties and 2.3micron CO strengths.
Hence, it appears that the central region of the bulge does not contain a
population of stars that are significantly more metal-rich than what is seen in
BW.Comment: 29 pages, including 14 figure
The Stellar Populations of NGC 3109: Another Dwarf Irregular Galaxy with a Population II Stellar Halo
We have obtained V and I-band photometry for about 17500 stars in the field
of the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC3109, located in the outskirts of the Local
Group. The photometry allows us to study the stellar populations present inside
and outside the disk of this galaxy. From the VI color-magnitude diagram we
infer metallicities and ages for the stellar populations in the main body and
in the halo of NGC3109. The stars in the disk of this galaxy have a wide
variety of ages, including very young stars with approximately 10^7 yr. Our
main result is to establish the presence of a halo consisting of population II
stars, extending out to about 4.5 arcmin (or 1.8 kpc) above and below the plane
of this galaxy. For these old stars we derive an age of > 10 Gyr and a
metallicity of [Fe/H] = -1.8 +/- 0.2. We construct a deep luminosity function,
obtaining an accurate distance modulus (m-M)_0 = 25.62 +/- 0.1 for this galaxy
based on the I-magnitude of the red giant branch (RGB) tip and adopting E(V-I)
= 0.05.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal 23 pages, latex,
12 Figures (Fig 1 not available in electronic format
Detection of Surface Brightness Fluctuations in Elliptical Galaxies imaged with the Advanced Camera for Surveys. B- and I-band measurements
Taking advantage of the exceptional capabilities of ACS on board of HST, we
derive Surface Brightness Fluctuation (SBF) measurements in the B and I bands
from images of six elliptical galaxies with . Given the
low S/N ratio of the SBF signal in the blue band images, the reliability of the
measurements is verified both with numerical simulations and experimental data
tests.
This paper presents the first published B- and I-band SBF measurements for
distant ( 20 Mpc) galaxies, essential for the comparisons of the models
to observations of normal ellipticals. By comparing I-band data with our new
Simple Stellar Population (SSP) models we find an excellent agreement and we
confirm that I-band SBF magnitudes are mainly sensitive to the metallicity of
the dominant stellar component in the galaxy, and are not strongly affected by
the contribution of possible secondary stellar components. As a consequence
I-band fluctuations magnitudes are ideal for distance studies. On the other
hand, we show that standard SSP models do not reproduce the B-band SBF
magnitudes of red ((B-I)_0 \gsim 2.1) galaxies in our sample. We explore the
capability of two non--canonical models in properly reproducing the high
sensitivity of B SBF to the presence of even small fractions of bright, hot
stars (metal poor stars, hot evolved stars, etc.). The disagreement is solved
both by taking into account hot (Post--AGB) stars in SSP models and/or by
adopting Composite Stellar Population models. Finally, we suggest a limit value
of the S/N for the B-band SBF signal required to carry out a detailed study of
stellar population properties based on this technique.Comment: ApJ accepte
Criblamydia sequanensis Harbors a Megaplasmid Encoding Arsenite Resistance.
Criblamydia sequanensis is an amoeba-resisting bacterium recently isolated from the Seine River. This Chlamydia-related bacterium harbors a genome of approximately 3 Mbp and a megaplasmid of 89,525 bp. The plasmid encodes several efflux systems and an operon for arsenite resistance. This first genome sequence within the Criblamydiaceae family enlarges our view on the evolution and the ecology of this important bacterial clade largely understudied so far
The Star Formation History of the Pegasus Dwarf Irregular Galaxy
The star formation history (SFH) of the Pegasus dIr, a likely Local Group
member at 0.95 Mpc from the Milky Way, is investigated. We characterize the SFH
by two basic functions: the star formation rate, psi(t), and the chemical
enrichment law, Z(t). It has been derived by comparing the color-magnitude
diagram of the resolved stars in Pegasus, with a total of 189 model diagrams
produced with different psi(t) and Z(t) laws.
Star formation began in Pegasus about 15 Gyr ago and was larger, on average,
during the first half than during the second half of the galaxy's life. During
the most recent epoch, the star formation seems to be produced in a bursting
mode. This may have been the case for the whole life of the galaxy, although
the resolution in time towards older epochs is not good enough to actually
detect it. As for the chemical enrichment law, the best way to account for the
observed metallicity of the galaxy (Zf=0.002(+0.002/-0.001) is that it suffered
a prompt initial chemical enrichment. This would be the case if infall was
important and points to a picture in which the galaxy began forming stars and
enriching its interstellar medium in an early phase of collapse.
Pegasus and NGC 6822 are the only dIrs for which the kind of analysis
presented here has been done. The fact that both galaxies show an important old
to intermediate-age stellar population indicates that the Baade's sheet
observed in most dIr, may in fact be the signature of an important population
of old stars and suggest that dIr actually are old objects populated by large
numbers of old stars. The percentage of dark matter in Pegasus turns out to be
92%.Comment: 33 pages, 1 table, 11 figures Astronomical Journal, in pres
The Many Possible Interpretations of Microlensing Event OGLE-2002-BLG-055
Microlensing event OGLE-2002-BLG-055 is characterized by a smooth, slightly
asymmetric single-lens curve with an isolated, secure data point that is ~0.6
magnitudes brighter than neighboring points separated by a few days. It was
previously suggested that the single deviant data point and global asymmetry
were best explained by a planetary companion to the primary lens with mass
ratio log(q)=-3 to -2, and parallax effects induced by the motion of the Earth.
We revisit the interpretation of OGLE-2002-BLG-055, and show that the data can
be explained by wide variety of models. We find that the deviant data point can
be fit by a large number of qualitatively different binary-lens models whose
mass ratios range, at the ~3-sigma level, from log(q) ~ -4 to -1. This range is
consistent with a planet, brown dwarf, or M-dwarf companion for reasonable
primary masses of M> 0.8 M_sun. A subset of these binary-lens fits consist of a
family of continuously degenerate models whose mass ratios differ by an
order-of-magnitude, but whose light curves differ by <2% for the majority of
the perturbation. The deviant data point can also explained by a binary
companion to the source with secondary/primary flux ratio of ~1%. This model
has the added appeal that the global asymmetry is naturally explained by the
acceleration of the primary induced by the secondary. The binary-source model
yields a measurement of the Einstein ring radius projected on source plane of
\hat r_E=1.87 +/- 0.40 AU. OGLE-2002-BLG-055 is an extreme example that
illustrates the difficulties and degeneracies inherent in the interpretation of
weakly perturbed and/or poorly sampled microlensing light curves.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Minor changes. Accepted to ApJ, to
appear in the August 10, 2004 issue (v611
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