414 research outputs found

    RR Lyrae stars in four globular clusters in the Fornax dwarf galaxy

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    (Abridged) We have surveyed four globular clusters in the Fornax dwarf galaxy for RR Lyrae stars, using archival HST observations. We identify 197 new RR Lyrae stars in these four clusters. Despite the short observational baseline, we derive periods, light-curves, and photometric parameters for each. The Fornax clusters have exceptionally large RR Lyrae specific frequencies compared with the Galactic globular clusters. Furthermore, the Fornax cluster RR Lyrae stars are unusual in that their characteristics are intermediate between the two Galactic Oosterhoff groups. In this respect the Fornax clusters are similar to the field populations in several dwarf galaxies. We revise previous measurements of the HB morphology in each cluster. The Fornax clusters closely resemble the ``young'' Galactic halo population defined by Zinn. The existence of the second parameter effect among the Fornax clusters is also confirmed. Finally, we determine foreground reddening and distance estimates for each cluster. We find a mean distance modulus to Fornax of (m-M)_0 = 20.66 +/- 0.03 (random) +/- 0.15 (systematic). Our measurements are consistent with a line of sight depth of 8-10 kpc for this galaxy, matching its projected dimensions, and incompatible with tidal model explanations for the observed high velocity dispersions in many dSph galaxies. Dark matter dominance is suggested.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Table 2 and Figure 2 will only be available in the electronic version. On-line data will soon be available at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/STELLARPOPS/Fornax_RRlyr

    Properties of RR Lyrae stars in the inner regions of the Large Magellanic Cloud. II. The extended sample

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    All galaxies that have been adequately examined so far have shown an extended stellar halo. To search for such a halo in the LMC we have obtained low-resolution spectra for 100 LMC RR Lyrae stars, of which 87 are in the field and 13 in the clusters NGC1835 and NGC2019. We measured radial velocities for 87 LMC RR Lyrae stars, and metallicities for 78 RR Lyrae stars, nearly tripling the previous sample. These targets are located in 10 fields covering a wide range of distances, out to 2.5 degrees from the center of the LMC. Our main result is that the mean velocity dispersion for the LMC RR Lyrae stars is 50+-2km/s. This quantity does not appear to vary with distance from the LMC center. The metallicity shows a Gaussian distribution, with mean [Fe/H]=-1.53+-0.02dex, and dispersion 0.20 dex in the Harris metallicity scale, confirming that they represent a very homogeneous metal-poor population. There is no dependence between the kinematics and metallicity of the field RR Lyrae star population. Using good quality low-resolution spectra from FORS1, FORS2 and GEMINI-GMOS we have found that field RR Lyrae stars in the LMC show a large velocity dispersion and that this indicate the presence of old and metal-poor stellar halo. All the evidence so far for the halo, however, is from the spectroscopy of the inner LMC regions, similar to the inner flattened halo in our Galaxy. Further study is necessary to confirm this important result.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    First-order thermal correction to the quadratic response tensor and rate for second harmonic plasma emission

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    Three-wave interactions in plasmas are described, in the framework of kinetic theory, by the quadratic response tensor (QRT). The cold-plasma QRT is a common approximation for interactions between three fast waves. Here, the first-order thermal correction (FOTC) to the cold-plasma QRT is derived for interactions between three fast waves in a warm unmagnetized collisionless plasma, whose particles have an arbitrary isotropic distribution function. The FOTC to the cold-plasma QRT is shown to depend on the second moment of the distribution function, the phase speeds of the waves, and the interaction geometry. Previous calculations of the rate for second harmonic plasma emission (via Langmuir-wave coalescence) assume the cold-plasma QRT. The FOTC to the cold-plasma QRT is used here to calculate the FOTC to the second harmonic emission rate, and its importance is assessed in various physical situations. The FOTC significantly increases the rate when the ratio of the Langmuir phase speed to the electron thermal speed is less than about 3.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasma

    WIYN Imaging of the Globular Cluster Systems of the Spiral Galaxies NGC891 and NGC4013

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    We present results from a WIYN 3.5m telescope imaging study of the globular cluster (GC) systems of the edge-on spiral galaxies NGC891 and NGC4013. We used the 10' x 10' Minimosaic Imager to observe the galaxies in BVR filters to projected radii of ~20 kpc from the galaxy centers. We combined the WIYN data with archival and published data from WFPC2 and ACS on the Hubble Space Telescope to assess the contamination level of the WIYN GC candidate sample and to follow the GC systems further in toward the galaxies' centers. We constructed radial distributions for the GC systems using both the WIYN and HST data. The GC systems of NGC891 and NGC4013 extend to 9+/-3 kpc and 14+/-5 kpc, respectively, before falling off to undetectable levels in our images. We use the radial distributions to calculate global values for the total number (N_GC) and specific frequencies (S_N and T) of GCs. NGC4013 has N_GC = 140+/-20, S_N = 1.0+/-0.2 and T = 1.9+/-0.5; our N_GC value is ~40% smaller than a previous determination from the literature. The HST data were especially useful for NGC891, because the GC system is concentrated toward the plane of the galaxy and was only weakly detected in our WIYN images. Although NGC891 is thought to resemble the Milky Way in its overall properties, it has only half as many GCs, with N_GC = 70+/-20, S_N = 0.3+/-0.1 and T = 0.6+/-0.3. We also calculate the galaxy-mass-normalized number of blue (metal-poor) GCs in NGC891 and NGC4013 and find that they fall along a general trend of increasing specific frequency of blue GCs with increasing galaxy mass. Given currently available resources, the optimal method for studying the global properties of extragalactic GC systems is to combine HST data with wide-field, ground-based imaging with good resolution. The results here demonstrate the advantage gained by using both methods when possible.Comment: 43 pages, 11 figures 6 tables; accepted to The Astronomical Journal. Online AJ version at http://iopscience.iop.org/1538-3881/140/2/430

    Old open clusters in the outer Galactic disk

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    The outer parts of the Milky Way disk are believed to be one of the main arenas where the accretion of external material in the form of dwarf galaxies and subsequent formation of streams is taking place. The Monoceros stream and the Canis Major and Argo over-densities are notorious examples. VLT high resolution spectra have been acquired for five distant open clusters. We derive accurate radial velocities to distinguish field interlopers and cluster members. For the latter we perform a detailed abundance analysis and derive the iron abundance [Fe/H] and the abundance ratios of several α\alpha elements. Our analysis confirms previous indications that the radial abundance gradient in the outer Galactic disk does not follow the expectations extrapolated from the solar vicinity, but exhibits a shallower slope. By combining the metallicity of the five program clusters with eight more clusters for which high resolution spectroscopy is available, we find that the mean metallicity in the outer disk between 12 and 21 kpc from the Galactic center is [Fe/H] 0.35\approx -0.35, with only marginal indications for a radial variation. In addition, all the program clusters exhibit solar scaled or slightly enhanced α\alpha elements, similar to open clusters in the solar vicinity and thin disk stars. We investigate whether this outer disk cluster sample might belong to an extra-galactic population, like the Monoceros ring. However, close scrutiny of their properties - location, kinematics and chemistry - does not convincingly favor this hypothesis. On the contrary, they appear more likely genuine Galactic disk clusters. We finally stress the importance to obtain proper motion measurements for these clusters to constrain their orbits.Comment: 19 pages, 9 eps figure, in press in A&A, abstract rephrased to fit i

    HST Snaphot Study of Variable Stars in Globular Clusters: Inner Region of NGC 6441

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    [Abridged] We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope snapshot program to survey the inner region of the globular cluster NGC 6441 for its variable stars. A total of 57 variable stars was found including 38 RR Lyrae stars, 6 Population II Cepheids, and 12 long period variables. Of the RR Lyrae stars observed in this survey, 26 are pulsating in the fundamental mode with a mean period of 0.753d and 12 are first-overtone mode pulsators with a mean period of 0.365d. These values match up very well with those found in ground-based surveys. Combining all the available data for NGC 6441, we find mean periods of 0.759d and 0.375d for the RRab and RRc stars, respectively. We also find that the RR Lyrae in this survey are located in the same regions of a period-amplitude diagram as those found in ground-based surveys. Although NGC 6441 is a metal-rich globular cluster, its RR Lyrae more closely resemble those in Oosterhoff type II globular clusters. However, even compared to typical Oosterhoff type II systems, the mean period of its RRab stars is unusually long. We also derived I-band period-luminosity relations for the RR Lyrae stars. Of the six Population II Cepheids, five are of W Virginis type and one is a BL Herculis variable stars. This makes NGC 6441, along with NGC 6388, the most metal-rich globular cluster known to contain these types of variable stars. Another variable, V118, may also be a Population II Cepheid given its long period and its separation in magnitude from the RR Lyrae stars. We argue that there does not appear to be a change in the period-luminosity relation slope between the BL Herculis and W Virginis stars, but that a change of slope does occur when the RV Tauri stars are added to the period-luminosity relation.Comment: 28 pages, including 9 figures and 8 tables, emulateapj5/apjfonts style. Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. Approximate publication date September 2003. We recommend the interested reader to download the preprint with full-resolution figures, which can be found at http://www.astro.puc.cl/~mcatelan/Pritzl.zi

    XMM-Newton X-ray and optical observations of the globular clusters M 55 and NGC 3201

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    We have observed two low concentration Galactic globular clusters with the X-ray observatory XMM-Newton. We detect 47 faint X-ray sources in the direction of M 55 and 62 in the field of view of NGC 3201. Using the statistical Log N-Log S relationship of extragalactic sources derived from XMM-Newton Lockman Hole observations, to estimate the background source population, we estimate that very few of the sources (1.5+/-1.0) in the field of view of M 55 actually belong to the cluster. These sources are located in the centre of the cluster as we expect if the cluster has undergone mass segregation. NGC 3201 has approximately 15 related sources, which are centrally located but are not constrained to lie within the half mass radius. The sources belonging to this cluster can lie up to 5 core radii from the centre of the cluster which could imply that this cluster has been perturbed. Using X-ray (and optical, in the case of M 55) colours, spectral and timing analysis (where possible) and comparing these observations to previous X-ray observations, we find evidence for sources in each cluster that could be cataclysmic variables, active binaries, millisecond pulsars and possible evidence for a quiescent low mass X-ray binary with a neutron star primary, even though we do not expect any such objects in either of the clusters, due to their low central concentrations. The majority of the other sources are background sources, such as AGN.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted to be published in A&
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