467 research outputs found
Deprojection of luminosity functions of galaxies in the Coma cluster
We use a simple analytic model to deproject 2-d luminosity functions (LF) of
galaxies in the Coma cluster measured by Beijersbergen et al. 2002. We
demonstrate that the shapes of the LFs change after deprojection. It is
therefore essential to correct LFs for projection effects. The deprojected LFs
of the central area have best-fitting Schechter parameters of
M^{*}_U=-18.31^{+0.08}_{-0.08} and \alpha_U=-1.27^{+0.018}_{-0.018},
M^{*}_B=-19.79^{+0.14}_{-0.15} and \alpha_B=-1.44^{+0.016}_{-0.016} and
M^{*}_r=-21.77^{+0.20}_{-0.28} and \alpha_r=-1.27^{+0.012}_{-0.012}. The
corrections are not significant enough to change the previously observed trend
of increasing faint end slopes with increasing distance to the cluster center.
The weighted U, B, and r band slopes of the deprojected LFs show a slightly
weaker steepening with increasing projected cluster radius.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A as a Research Not
Initial Optical Results for the ChaMPlane Survey
We provide a brief description of the optical survey being conducted under
the NOAO Long Term Surveys program in support of the Chandra Multiwavelength
Plane (ChaMPlane) Survey (see paper by Grindlay et al. in this Volume). A
representative photometry result is shown, along with spectroscopic followup.Comment: 1 page, 2 figures (in 3 files). Astronomische Nachrichten, in press
(Feb 2003). Proceedings of "X-ray Surveys, in the Light of New
Observatories", 4-6 September, Santander, Spai
Faint X-ray Sources in the Globular Cluster Terzan 5
We report our analysis of a Chandra X-ray observation of the rich globular
cluster Terzan 5, in which we detect 50 sources to a limiting 1.0-6 keV X-ray
luminosity of 3*10^{31} ergs/s within the half-mass radius of the cluster.
Thirty-three of these have L_X>10^{32} ergs/s, the largest number yet seen in
any globular cluster. In addition to the quiescent low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB,
identified by Wijnands et al.), another 12 relatively soft sources may be
quiescent LMXBs. We compare the X-ray colors of the harder sources in Terzan 5
to the Galactic Center sources studied by Muno and collaborators, and find the
Galactic Center sources to have harder X-ray colors, indicating a possible
difference in the populations. We cannot clearly identify a metallicity
dependence in the production of low-luminosity X-ray binaries in Galactic
globular clusters, but a metallicity dependence of the form suggested by Jordan
et al. for extragalactic LMXBs is consistent with our data.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures (3 color). Resubmitted to ApJ after
incorporating referee comments. v2: Added references to introductio
Identification of Faint Chandra X-ray Sources in the Core-Collapsed Globular Cluster NGC 6752
We have searched for optical identifications for 39 Chandra X-ray sources
that lie within the 1.9 arcmin half-mass radius of the nearby (d = 4.0 kpc),
core-collapsed globular cluster, NGC 6752, using deep Hubble Space Telescope
ACS/WFC imaging in B435, R625, and H alpha. Photometry of these images allows
us to classify candidate counterparts based primarily on color-magnitude and
color-color diagram location. The color-color diagram is particularly useful
for quantifying the H alpha line equivalent width. In addition to recovering 11
previously detected optical counterparts, we propose 20 new optical IDs. In
total, there are 16 likely or less certain cataclysmic variables (CVs), nine
likely or less certain chromospherically active binaries, three galaxies, and
three active galactic nuclei (AGNs). The latter three sources, which had been
identified as likely CVs by previous investigations, now appear to be
extragalactic objects based on their proper motions. As we previously found for
NGC 6397, the CV candidates in NGC 6752 fall into a bright group that is
centrally concentrated relative to the turnoff-mass stars and a faint group
that has a spatial distribution that is more similar to that of the
turnoff-mass stars. This is consistent with an evolutionary scenario in which
CVs are produced by dynamical interactions near the cluster center and diffuse
to larger radius orbits as they age.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figure
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