4,341 research outputs found
Theoretical Isochrones with Extinction in the K Band. II. J - K versus K
We calculate theoretical isochrones in a consistent way for five filter pairs
near the J and K band atmospheric windows (J-K, J-K', J-Ks, F110W-F205W, and
F110W-F222M) using the Padova stellar evolutionary models of Girardi et al. We
present magnitude transformations between various K-band filters as a function
of color. Isochrones with extinction of up to 6 mag in the K band are also
presented. As found for the filter pairs composed of H & K band filters, we
find that the reddened isochrones of different filter pairs behave as if they
follow different extinction laws, and that the extinction curves of Hubble
Space Telescope NICMOS filter pairs in the color-magnitude diagram are
considerably nonlinear. Because of these problems, extinction values estimated
with NICMOS filters can be in error by up to 1.3 mag. Our calculation suggests
that the extinction law implied by the observations of Rieke et al for
wavelengths between the J and K bands is better described by a power-law
function with an exponent of 1.66 instead of 1.59, which is commonly used with
an assumption that the transmission functions of J and K filters are Dirac
delta functions.Comment: Published in PASP, 118, 62 (Jan. 2006
MOS CCDs for the wide field imager on the XEUS spacecraft
In recent years the XEUS mission concept has evolved and has been the subject of several industrial studies. The mission concept has now matured to the point that it could be proposed for a Phase A study and subsequent flight programme. The key feature of XEUS will be its X-ray optic with collecting area ~30-100x that of XMM. The mission is envisaged at an orbit around the L2 point in space, and is formed from two spacecraft; one for the mirrors, and the other for the focal plane detectors. With a focal length of 50m, the plate scale of the optic is 6.5x that of XMM, which using existing focal plane technology will reduce the effective field of view to a few arc minutes. Cryogenic instrumentation, with detector sizes of a few mm can only be used for narrow field studies of target objects, and a wide field instrument is under consideration using a DEPFET pixel array to image out to a diameter of 5 arcminutes, requiring an array of dimension 70mm. It is envisaged to extend this field of view possibly out to 15 arcminutes through the use of an outer detection ring comprised of MOS CCD
The Distance of the First Overtone RR Lyrae Variables in the MACHO LMC Database: A New Method to Correct for the Effects of Crowding
Previous studies have indicated that many of the RR Lyrae variables in the
LMC have properties similar to the ones in the Galactic globular cluster M3.
Assuming that the M3 RR Lyrae variables follow the same relationships among
period, temperature, amplitude and Fourier phase parameter phi31 as their LMC
counterparts, we have used the M3 phi31-logP relation to identify the M3-like
unevolved first overtone RR Lyrae variables in 16 fields near the LMC bar. The
temperatures of these variables were calculated from the M3 logP-logTe relation
so that the extinction could be derived for each star separately. Since blended
stars have lower amplitudes for a given period, the period amplitude relation
should be a useful tool for identifying which stars are affected by crowding.
We find that the low amplitude stars are brighter. We remove them from the
sample and derive an LMC distance modulus 18.49+/-0.11.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
Globular Clusters: DNA of Early-Type galaxies?
This paper explores if the mean properties of Early-Type Galaxies (ETG) can
be reconstructed from "genetic" information stored in their GCs (i.e., in their
chemical abundances, spatial distributions and ages). This approach implies
that the formation of each globular occurs in very massive stellar
environments, as suggested by some models that aim at explaining the presence
of multi-populations in these systems. The assumption that the relative number
of globular clusters to diffuse stellar mass depends exponentially on chemical
abundance, [Z/H], and the presence of two dominant GC sub-populations blue and
red, allows the mapping of low metallicity halos and of higher metallicity (and
more heterogeneous) bulges. In particular, the masses of the low-metallicity
halos seem to scale up with dark matter mass through a constant. We also find a
dependence of the globular cluster formation efficiency with the mean projected
stellar mass density of the galaxies within their effective radii. The analysis
is based on a selected sub-sample of galaxies observed within the ACS Virgo
Cluster Survey of the {\it Hubble Space Telescope}. These systems were grouped,
according to their absolute magnitudes, in order to define composite fiducial
galaxies and look for a quantitative connection with their (also composite)
globular clusters systems. The results strengthen the idea that globular
clusters are good quantitative tracers of both baryonic and dark matter in
ETGs.Comment: 20 pages, 28 figures and 5 table
Predicted properties of RR Lyrae stars in the SDSS photometric system
The luminosities and effective temperatures, as well as the whole bolometric
lightcurves of nonlinear convective RR Lyrae models with 0.0001<Z<0.006 are
transformed into the SDSS photometric system. The obtained ugriz lightcurves,
mean magnitudes and colors, pulsation amplitudes and color-color loops are
shown and analytical relations connecting pulsational to intrinsic stellar
parameters, similarly to the ones currently used in the Johnson-Cousins
filters, are derived. Finally the behaviour in the color-color planes is
compared with available observations in the literature and possible systematic
uncertainties affecting this comparison are discussed.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Theoretical models for classical Cepheids. VIII. Effects of helium and heavy elements abundance on the Cepheid distance scale
Previous nonlinear fundamental pulsation models for classical Cepheids with
metal content Z <= 0.02 are implemented with new computations at super-solar
metallicity (Z=0.03, 0.04) and selected choices of the helium-to-metal
enrichment ratio DeltaY/Delta Z. On this basis, we show that the location into
the HR diagram of the Cepheid instability strip is dependent on both metal and
helium abundance, moving towards higher effective temperatures with decreasing
the metal content (at fixed Y) or with increasing the helium content (at fixed
Z). The contributions of helium and metals to the predicted Period-Luminosity
and Period-Luminosity-Color relations are discussed, as well as the
implications on the Cepheid distance scale. Based on these new results, we
finally show that the empirical metallicity correction suggested by Cepheid
observations in two fields of the galaxy M101 may be accounted for, provided
that the adopted helium-to-metal enrichment ratio is reasonably high (Delta
Y/Delta Z ~ 3.5).Comment: 23 pages, including 6 postscript figures, accepted for publication on
Ap
Report 1 PHIN-CARE-JRA2-WP3 Second Task: Pulse Shaping
This report presents the activity developed on laser pulse shaping argument in years 2004-2005 by Milano-INFN within the framework of CARE /JRA2 \Charge production with Photoinjectors"
second task \Pulse Shaping". A dedicated laser system with the relative diagnostic
tools have been developed. A liquid crystal programmable spatial light modulator(LCP-SLM)
shaper have been studied and set for the generation of di®erent waveforms. The shaper is
integrated in the laser system for an automatic generation of the target waveforms via the
insetion of a computer which drives the system through the developed software. The system
can be programmed to generate any target waveform compatible with the spectral bandwidth
of the laser system and some exemples are presented. The following issues are treated: (i)
the operation stability as function of perturbations of the set-up parameters, (ii) the design
of the shaper for the SPARC project, (iii) a new shaper concept for the generation of long
target waveforms and (iiii) the rectangular pulse generation at the second harmonic
Effective temperatures and radii of planet-hosting stars from IR photometry
In this paper we present and analyse determinations of effective temperatures
of planet-hosting stars using infrared (IR) photometry. One of our goals is the
comparison with spectroscopic temperatures to evaluate the presence of
systematic effects that could alter the determination of metal abundances. To
estimate the stellar temperatures we have followed a new approach based on
fitting the observed 2MASS IR photometry with accurately calibrated synthetic
photometry. Special care has been put in evaluating all sources of possible
errors and incorporating them in the analysis. A comparison of our temperature
determinations with spectroscopic temperatures published by different groups
reveals the presence of no systematic trends and a scatter compatible with the
quoted uncertainties of 0.5-1.3%. This mutual agreement strengthens the results
of both the spectroscopic and IR photometry analyses. Comparisons with other
photometric temperature calibrations, generally with poorer performances, are
also presented. In addition, the method employed of fitting IR photometry
naturally yields determinations of the stellar semi-angular diameters, which,
when combined with the distances, results in estimations of the stellar radii
with remarkable accuracies of ~2-4%. A comparison with the only star in the
sample with an empirically determined radius (HD 209458 -- from transit
photometry) indicates excellent agreement.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication as a letter in A&
CCD Photometry of Galactic Globular Clusters. IV. The NGC 1851 RR Lyraes
The variable star population of the galactic globular cluster NGC 1851
(C0512-400) has been studied by CCD photometry, from observations made in the
B, V, and I bands during 1993-4. Light curves are presented for 29 variables,
seven of which are new discoveries. The behavior of the RR lyraes in the
period-temperature diagram appears normal when compared to clusters which
bracket the NGC 1851 metallicity. Reddening and metallicity are re-evaluated,
with no compelling evidence to change from accepted values. Photometry for
stars within an annulus with radii 80 and 260 arcsec agrees to better than 0.02
mag in all colors with extensive earlier photometry, to at least V = 18.5.
Instability strip boundary positions for several clusters shows a trend for the
red boundary to move to redder colors as the metallicity increases.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, accepted by A.
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