5,988 research outputs found
The edge of the young Galactic disc
In this work we report and discuss the detection of two distant diffuse
stellar groups in the third Galactic quadrant. They are composed of young
stars, with spectral types ranging from late O to late B, and lie at
galactocentric distances between 15 and 20 kpc. These groups are located in the
area of two cataloged open clusters (VdB-Hagen~04 and Ruprecht~30), projected
towards the Vela-Puppis constellations, and within the core of the Canis Major
over-density. Their reddening and distance has been estimated analyzing their
color-color and color-magnitude diagrams, derived from deep photometry.
The existence of young star aggregates at such extreme distances from the
Galactic center challenges the commonly accepted scenario in which the Galactic
disc has a sharp cut-off at about 14 kpc from the Galactic center, and
indicates that it extends to much greater distances (as also supported by
recent detection of CO molecular complexes well beyond this distance). While
the groups we find in the area of Ruprecht~30 are compatible with the Orion and
Norma-Cygnus spiral arms, respectively, the distant group we identify in the
region of VdB-Hagen~4 lies in the external regions of the Norma-Cygnus arm, at
a galactocentric distance (20 kpc) where no young stars had been detected
so far in the optical.Comment: 45 pages, 11 eps figure, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
NGC 4337: an over-looked old cluster in the inner disc of the Milky Way
Galactic open clusters do not survive long in the high density regions of the
inner Galactic disc. Inside the solar ring only 11 open clusters are known with
ages older than one Gyr. We show here, basing on deep, high-quality photometry,
that NGC 4337, contrary to earlier findings, is indeed an old open cluster. The
cluster is located very close to the conspicuous star cluster Trumpler 20, as
well mis-classified in the past, and that has received so much attention in
recent years. NGC 4337 shows a significant clump of He-burning stars which was
not detected previously. Its beautiful color-magnitude diagram is strikingly
similar to the one of the classical old open clusters IC 4651, NGC 752, and NGC
3680, and this suggests similar age and composition. A spectroscopic study is
much needed to confirm our findings. This, in turn, would also allow us to
better define the inner disc radial abundance gradient and its temporal
evolution.To this aim, a list of clump star candidates is provided.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, in press as MNRAS Lette
Real-time marker-less multi-person 3D pose estimation in RGB-Depth camera networks
This paper proposes a novel system to estimate and track the 3D poses of
multiple persons in calibrated RGB-Depth camera networks. The multi-view 3D
pose of each person is computed by a central node which receives the
single-view outcomes from each camera of the network. Each single-view outcome
is computed by using a CNN for 2D pose estimation and extending the resulting
skeletons to 3D by means of the sensor depth. The proposed system is
marker-less, multi-person, independent of background and does not make any
assumption on people appearance and initial pose. The system provides real-time
outcomes, thus being perfectly suited for applications requiring user
interaction. Experimental results show the effectiveness of this work with
respect to a baseline multi-view approach in different scenarios. To foster
research and applications based on this work, we released the source code in
OpenPTrack, an open source project for RGB-D people tracking.Comment: Submitted to the 2018 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and
Automatio
Blue Straggler Stars in Galactic Open Clusters and the effect of field star contamination
We investigate the distribution of Blue Straggler stars in the field of three
open star clusters. The main purpose is to highlight the crucial role played by
general Galactic disk fore-/back-ground field stars, which are often located in
the same region of the Color Magnitude Diagram as Blue Straggler stars. We
analyze photometry taken from the literature of 3 open clusters of
intermediate/old age rich in Blue Straggler stars, and which are projected in
the direction of the Perseus arm, and study their spatial distribution and the
Color Magnitude Diagram. As expected, we find that a large portion of the Blue
Straggler population in these clusters are simply young field stars belonging
to the spiral arm. This result has important consequences on the theories of
the formation and statistics of Blue Straggler stars in different population
environments: open clusters, globular clusters or dwarf galaxies. As previously
emphasized by many authors, a detailed membership analysis is mandatory before
comparing the Blue Straggler population in star clusters against theoretical
models. Moreover, these sequences of young field stars (blue plumes) are
potentially powerful tracers of Galactic structure which require further
consideration.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figurs, in press as Research Note in A&
Evidence of tidal distortions and mass loss from the old open cluster NGC 6791
We present the first evidence of clear signatures of tidal distortions in the
density distribution of the fascinating open cluster NGC 6791. We used deep and
wide-field data obtained with the Canada-France-Hawaii-Telescope covering a 2x2
square degrees area around the cluster. The two-dimensional density map
obtained with the optimal matched filter technique shows a clear elongation and
an irregular distribution starting from ~300" from the cluster center. At
larger distances, two tails extending in opposite directions beyond the tidal
radius are also visible. These features are aligned to both the absolute proper
motion and to the Galactic center directions. Moreover, other overdensities
appear to be stretched in a direction perpendicular to the Galactic plane.
Accordingly to the behaviour observed in the density map, we find that both the
surface brightness and the star count density profiles reveal a departure from
a King model starting from ~600" from the center. These observational evidence
suggest that NGC 6791 is currently experiencing mass loss likely due to
gravitational shocking and interactions with the tidal field. We use this
evidence to argue that NGC 6791 should have lost a significant fraction of its
original mass. A larger initial mass would in fact explain why the cluster
survived so long. Using available recipes based on analytic studies and N-body
simulations, we derived the expected mass loss due to stellar evolution and
tidal interactions and estimated the initial cluster mass to be M_ini=(1.5-4) x
10^5 M_sun.Comment: Accepted for publication in the MNRAS (9 pages, 8 Figures
The Allocation of European Union Allowances: Lessons, Unifying Themes and General Principles
This paper is the concluding chapter of Rights, Rents and Fairness: Allocation in the European Emissions Trading Scheme, edited by the co-authors and forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. The main objective of this paper is to distill the lessons and general principles to be learnt from the allocation of allowances in the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS), i.e. in the world’s first experience with allocating carbon allowances to sub-national entities. We discuss the lessons that emerge from this experience and make some comments on what seem to be more general principles informing the allocation process and on what are the global implications of the EU ETS. As has become obvious during the first allocation phase, the diversity of experience among the Member States is considerable, so that it must be understood that these lessons and unifying themes are drawn from the experience of most of the Member States, not necessarily from all. Lessons and unifying observations are grouped in three categories: those concerning the conditions encountered, the processes employed, and the actual choices.Climate Change, Emission Trading, Allocation, Fairness, EU Policy
Photometry of a Galactic field at l = 232, b = -6. The old open cluster Auner 1, the Norma-Cygnus spiral arm and the signature of the warped Galactic Thick Disk
We perform a detailed photometric study of the stellar populations in a
Galactic Field at l = 232, b = -6 in the Canis Major (CMa) constellation. We
present the first U,B,V,I photometry of the old open cluster Auner1 and
determine it to be 3.25 Gyr old and to lie at 8.9 kpc from the Sun. In the
background of the cluster, at more than 9 kpc, we detect a young population
most probably associated to the Norma Cygnus spiral arm. Furthermore, we detect
the signature of an older population and identify its Turn Off and Red Giant
Branch. This population is found to have a mean age of 7 Gyrs and a mean
metallicity of Z = 0.006 . We reconstruct the geometry of the stellar
distribution and argue that this older population - often associated to the
Canis Major {\it galaxy}- belongs in fact to the warped old thin/thick disk
component along this line of sight.Comment: 19 pages, 7 eps figures (some degraded), accepted for publication in
the Astronomical Journa
Stellar populations in the Carina region: The Galactic plane at l = 291
Previous studies of the Carina region have revealed its complexity and
richness as well as a significant number of early-type stars. In many cases,
these studies only concentrated on the central region or were not homogeneous.
This latter aspect, in particular, is crucial because very different ages and
distances for key clusters have been claimed in recent years. The aim of this
work is to study in detail an area of the Galactic plane in Carina. We analyze
the properties of different stellar populations and focus on a sample of open
clusters and their population of YSOs and highly reddened early stars. We also
studied the stellar mass distribution in these clusters and the possible
scenario of their formation. Finally, we outline the Galactic spiral structure
in this direction. We obtained photometric data for six young open clusters
located in Carina at l = 291, and their adjacent stellar fields, which we
complemented with spectroscopic observations of a few selected targets. We also
culled additional information from the literature. Our results provide more
reliable estimates of distances, color excesses, masses, and ages of the
stellar populations in this direction. We estimate the basic parameters of the
studied clusters and find that they identify two overdensities of young stellar
populations. We find evidence of PMS populations inside them, with an apparent
coeval stellar formation in the most conspicuous clusters. We also discuss
apparent age and distance gradients in the direction NW-SE. We study the mass
distributions of several clusters in the region. They consistently show a
canonical IMF slope. We discover and characterise an abnormally reddened
massive stellar population. Spectroscopic observations of ten stars of this
latter population show that all selected targets were massive OB stars. Their
location is consistent with the position of the Car-Sag spiral arm.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
No evidence for a dark matter disk within 4 kpc from the Galactic plane
We estimated the dynamical surface mass density (Sigma) at the solar
Galactocentric distance between 2 and 4 kpc from the Galactic plane, as
inferred from the observed kinematics of the thick disk. We find Sigma(z=2
kpc)=57.6+-5.8 Mo pc^-2, and it shows only a tiny increase in the z-range
considered by our investigation. We compared our results with the expectations
for the visible mass, adopting the most recent estimates in the literature for
contributions of the Galactic stellar disk and interstellar medium, and
proposed models of the dark matter distribution. Our results match the
expectation for the visible mass alone, never differing from it by more than
0.8 $Mo pc^-2 at any z, and thus we find little evidence for any dark
component. We assume that the dark halo could be undetectable with our method,
but the dark disk, recently proposed as a natural expectation of the LambdaCDM
models, should be detected. Given the good agreement with the visible mass
alone, models including a dark disk are less likely, but within errors its
existence cannot be excluded. In any case, these results put constraints on its
properties: thinner models (scale height lower than 4 kpc) reconcile better
with our results and, for any scale height, the lower-density models are
preferred. We believe that successfully predicting the stellar thick disk
properties and a dark disk in agreement with our observations could be a
challenging theoretical task.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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