2,039 research outputs found
The Internal Dynamics of Globular Clusters
Galactic globular clusters are ancient building blocks of our Galaxy. They
represent a very interesting family of stellar systems in which some
fundamental dynamical processes have been taking place for more than 10 Gyr,
but on time scales shorter than the age of the universe. In contrast with
galaxies, these star clusters represent unique laboratories for learning about
two-body relaxation, mass segregation from equipartition of energy, stellar
collisions, stellar mergers, core collapse, and tidal disruption. This review
briefly summarizes some of the tremendous developments that have taken place
during the last two decades. It ends with some recent results on tidal tails
around galactic globular clusters and on a very massive globular cluster in
M31.Comment: An invited review (32 pages, 7 figures) in "The Chaotic Universe:
Theory, Observations, Computer Experiments", Proceedings of the ICRA
Rome-Pescara workshop, eds. V.G. Gurzadyan and R. Ruffini (Singapore: World
Sci.), in pres
The Stellar Dynamics of Omega Centauri
The stellar dynamics of Omega Centauri are inferred from the radial
velocities of 469 stars measured with CORAVEL (Mayor et al. 1997). Rather than
fit the data to a family of models, we generate estimates of all dynamical
functions nonparametrically, by direct operation on the data. The cluster is
assumed to be oblate and edge-on but mass is not assumed to follow light. The
mean motions are consistent with axisymmetry but the rotation is not
cylindrical. The peak rotational velocity is 7.9 km/s at 11 pc from the center.
The apparent rotation of Omega Centauri is attributable in part to its proper
motion. We reconstruct the stellar velocity ellipsoid as a function of
position, assuming isotropy in the meridional plane. We find no significant
evidence for a difference between the velocity dispersions parallel and
perpendicular to the meridional plane. The mass distribution inferred from the
kinematics is slightly more extended than, though not strongly inconsistent
with, the luminosity distribution. We also derive the two-integral distribution
function f(E,Lz) implied by the velocity data.Comment: 25 Latex pages, 12 Postscript figures, uses aastex, epsf.sty.
Submitted to The Astronomical Journal, December 199
Interpolating point spread function anisotropy
Planned wide-field weak lensing surveys are expected to reduce the
statistical errors on the shear field to unprecedented levels. In contrast,
systematic errors like those induced by the convolution with the point spread
function (PSF) will not benefit from that scaling effect and will require very
accurate modeling and correction. While numerous methods have been devised to
carry out the PSF correction itself, modeling of the PSF shape and its spatial
variations across the instrument field of view has, so far, attracted much less
attention. This step is nevertheless crucial because the PSF is only known at
star positions while the correction has to be performed at any position on the
sky. A reliable interpolation scheme is therefore mandatory and a popular
approach has been to use low-order bivariate polynomials. In the present paper,
we evaluate four other classical spatial interpolation methods based on splines
(B-splines), inverse distance weighting (IDW), radial basis functions (RBF) and
ordinary Kriging (OK). These methods are tested on the Star-challenge part of
the GRavitational lEnsing Accuracy Testing 2010 (GREAT10) simulated data and
are compared with the classical polynomial fitting (Polyfit). We also test all
our interpolation methods independently of the way the PSF is modeled, by
interpolating the GREAT10 star fields themselves (i.e., the PSF parameters are
known exactly at star positions). We find in that case RBF to be the clear
winner, closely followed by the other local methods, IDW and OK. The global
methods, Polyfit and B-splines, are largely behind, especially in fields with
(ground-based) turbulent PSFs. In fields with non-turbulent PSFs, all
interpolators reach a variance on PSF systematics better than
the upper bound expected by future space-based surveys, with
the local interpolators performing better than the global ones
Evaluating the effect of stellar multiplicity on the PSF of space-based weak lensing surveys
The next generation of space-based telescopes used for weak lensing surveys
will require exquisite point spread function (PSF) determination. Previously
negligible effects may become important in the reconstruction of the PSF, in
part because of the improved spatial resolution. In this paper, we show that
unresolved multiple star systems can affect the ellipticity and size of the PSF
and that this effect is not cancelled even when using many stars in the
reconstruction process. We estimate the error in the reconstruction of the PSF
due to the binaries in the star sample both analytically and with image
simulations for different PSFs and stellar populations. The simulations support
our analytical finding that the error on the size of the PSF is a function of
the multiple stars distribution and of the intrinsic value of the size of the
PSF, i.e. if all stars were single. Similarly, the modification of each of the
complex ellipticity components (e1,e2) depends on the distribution of multiple
stars and on the intrinsic complex ellipticity. Using image simulations, we
also show that the predicted error in the PSF shape is a theoretical limit that
can be reached only if large number of stars (up to thousands) are used
together to build the PSF at any desired spatial position. For a lower number
of stars, the PSF reconstruction is worse. Finally, we compute the effect of
binarity for different stellar magnitudes and show that bright stars alter the
PSF size and ellipticity more than faint stars. This may affect the design of
PSF calibration strategies and the choice of the related calibration fields.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted in A&
Palomar 13: a velocity dispersion inflated by binaries ?
Recently, combining radial velocities from Keck/HIRES echelle spectra with
published proper motion membership probabilities, Cote et al (2002) observed a
sample of 21 stars, probable members of Palomar 13, a globular cluster in the
Galactic halo. Their projected velocity dispersion sigma_p = 2.2 +/-0.4 km/s
gives a mass-to-light ratio M/L_V = 40 +24/-17, about one order of magnitude
larger than the usual estimate for globular clusters. We present here radial
velocities measured from three different CCD frames of commissioning
observations obtained with the new ESO/VLT instrument FLAMES (Fibre Large Array
Multi Element Spectrograph). From these data, now publicly available, we
measure the homogeneous radial velocities of eight probable members of this
globular cluster. A new projected velocity dispersion sigma_p = 0.6-0.9 +/-0.3
km/s implies Palomar 13 mass-to-light ratio M/L_V = 3-7, similar to the usual
value for globular clusters. We discuss briefly the two most obvious reasons
for the previous unusual mass-to-light ratio finding: binaries, now clearly
detected, and more homogeneous data from the multi-fibre FLAMES spectrograph.Comment: 9 pages, 2 Postscript figure
The Mass Function of Main Sequence Stars in NGC6397 from Near IR and Optical High Resolution HST Observations
We have investigated the properties of the stellar mass function in the
globular cluster NGC6397 using a large set of HST observations that include
WFPC2 images in V and I, obtained at ~4' and 10' radial distances, and a series
of deep images in the J and H bands obtained with the NIC2 and NIC3 cameras of
NICMOS pointed to regions located ~4.5' and ~3.2' from the center. These
observations span the region from ~1 to ~3 times the cluster's half-light
radius. All luminosity functions, derived from color magniutde diagrams,
increase with decreasing luminosity up to a peak at M_I~8.5 or M_H~7 and then
precipitously drop well before photometric incompleteness becomes significant.
Within the observational uncertainties, at M_I~12 or M_H~10.5 (~0.09 Msun) the
luminosity functions are compatible with zero. By applying the best available
mass- luminosity relation appropriate to the metallicity of NGC6397 to both the
optical and IR data, we obtain a mass function that shows a break in slope at
\~0.3 Msun. No single exponent power-law distribution is compatible with these
data, regardless of the value of the exponent. We find that a dynamical model
of the cluster can simultaneously reproduce all the luminosity functions
observed throughout the cluster only if the IMF rises as m**-1.6 in the range
0.8-0.3 Msun and then drops as m**0.2 below ~0.3 Msun. Adopting a more physical
log-normal distribution for the IMF, all these data taken together imply a best
fit distribution with characteristic mass m_c~0.3 and sigma~1.8.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures (ps). Accepted for publication in Ap
Mayall II = G1 in M31: Giant Globular Cluster or Core of a Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy ?
(Abridged version) Mayall II = G1 is one of the brightest globular clusters
belonging to M31, the Andromeda galaxy. Our observations with HST/WFPC2 provide
data for the (I vs. V-I) and (V vs. V-I) color-magnitude diagrams. From model
fitting, we determine a rather high mean metallicity of [Fe/H] = --0.95 +-
0.09, somewhat similar to 47 Tucanae. We find a larger spread in V-I than can
be explained by the measurement errors, and we attribute this to an intrinsic
metallicity dispersion amongst the stars of G1. So far, only omega Centauri,
the giant Galactic globular cluster, has been known to exhibit such an
intrinsic metallicity dispersion.
Three estimates of the total mass of this globular cluster can be obtained:
King mass = 15 x 10^6 with M/Lv ~ 7.5, Virial mass = 7.3 x 10^6 with M/Lv ~
3.6, and King-Michie mass range from 14 to 17 x 10^6. Although uncertain, all
of these mass estimates make G1 more than twice as massive as omega Centauri.
Such large masses relate to the metallicity spread whose origin is still
unknown (either self-enrichment, an inhomogeneous proto-cluster cloud, or
remaining core of a dwarf galaxy). When considering the positions of G1 in the
different diagrams defined by Kormendy (1985), G1 always appears on the
sequence defined by globular clusters, and definitely away from the other
sequences defined by elliptical galaxies, bulges, and dwarf spheroidal
galaxies. The same is true for omega Centauri and for the nucleus of the dwarf
elliptical NGC 205. This does not prove that all (massive) globular clusters
are the remnant cores of nucleated dwarf galaxies.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in AJ (August 2001
Sub-arcsecond imaging and spectroscopy of the radio-loud highly polarized quasar PKS 1610-771
We report on imaging and spectroscopic observations of the radio-loud, highly
polarized quasar PKS 1610-771 (z = 1.71). Our long-slit spectroscopy of the
companion 4.55 arcseconds NW of the quasar confirms the stellar nature of this
object, so ruling out the previously suspected gravitationally lensed nature of
this system. PKS 1610-771 looks fuzzy on our sub-arcsecond R and I images and
appears located in a rich environment of faint galaxies. Possible
magnification, without image splitting of the quasar itself, by some of these
maybe foreground galaxies cannot be excluded. The continuum fuzz (made of the
closest two objects, viz. A and D) is elongated in a direction orthogonal to
the E vector of the optical polarization, as in high-redshift radio-galaxies.
The spectrum of PKS 1610-771 appears strongly curved, in a convex way, with a
maximum of intensity at ~ 7,600 A (2,800 A rest frame), possibly indicating a
strong ultraviolet absorption by dust.Comment: 6 pages, uuencoded gziped tar file including TeX file + postscript
figures. Accepted for publication in A&A main journa
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