5,329 research outputs found
Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs around Sigma Orionis
We present optical spectroscopy of 71 photometric candidate low-mass members
of the cluster associated with Sigma Orionis. Thirty-five of these are found to
pass the lithium test and hence are confirmed as true cluster members, covering
a mass range of <0.055-0.3M_{sun}, assuming a mean cluster age of <5 Myr. We
find evidence for an age spread on the (I, I-J) colour magnitude diagram,
members appearing to lie in the range 1-7 Myr. There are, however, a
significant fraction of candidates that are non-members, including some
previously identified as members based on photometry alone. We see some
evidence that the ratio of spectroscopically confirmed members to photometric
candidates decreases with brightness and mass. This highlights the importance
of spectroscopy in determining the true initial mass-function.Comment: To appear in the 12th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars Stellar
Systems and the Su
Elementary Teachers’ Ideologies On The Experience Of A Mixed-Race Student
With bi/multi-racial students existing within a nebulous racial categorization that has been historically defined to support an economic agenda, creating a positive self-identity for students in this group can be challenging. This article examined those challenges by exploring the reflections of elementary level teachers’ classroom practices and perceptions of the collective elementary educational experience of one bi-racial student in a southeastern U.S. public school
The low-mass Initial Mass Function in the young cluster NGC 6611
NGC 6611 is the massive young cluster (2-3 Myr) that ionises the Eagle
Nebula. We present very deep photometric observations of the central region of
NGC 6611 obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and the following filters:
ACS/WFC F775W and F850LP and NIC2 F110W and F160W, loosely equivalent to
ground-based IZJH filters. This survey reaches down to I ~ 26 mag. We construct
the Initial Mass Function (IMF) from ~ 1.5 Msun well into the brown dwarf
regime (down to ~ 0.02 Msun). We have detected 30-35 brown dwarf candidates in
this sample. The low-mass IMF is combined with a higher-mass IMF constructed
from the groundbased catalogue from Oliveira et al. (2005). We compare the
final IMF with those of well studied star forming regions: we find that the IMF
of NGC 6611 more closely resembles that of the low-mass star forming region in
Taurus than that of the more massive Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). We conclude
that there seems to be no severe environmental effect in the IMF due to the
proximity of the massive stars in NGC 6611.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS (main journal); 18 pages, 12
figures and 3 table
The discovery of a low mass, pre-main-sequence stellar association around gamma Velorum
We report the serendipitous discovery of a population of low mass, pre-main
sequence stars (PMS) in the direction of the Wolf-Rayet/O-star binary system
gamma^{2} Vel and the Vela OB2 association. We argue that gamma^{2} Vel and the
low mass stars are truly associated, are approximately coeval and that both are
at distances between 360-490 pc, disagreeing at the 2 sigma level with the
recent Hipparcos parallax of gamma^{2} Vel, but consistent with older distance
estimates. Our results clearly have implications for the physical parameters of
the gamma^{2} Vel system, but also offer an exciting opportunity to investigate
the influence of high mass stars on the mass function and circumstellar disc
lifetimes of their lower mass PMS siblings.Comment: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Letters - in pres
Ages, Distances, and the Initial Mass Functions of Stellar Clusters
We provide a review of the current status of several topics on the ages,
distances, and mass functions of open clusters, with a particular emphasis on
illuminating the areas of uncertainty. Hipparcos has obtained parallaxes for
nearby open clusters that have expected accuracies much better than has been
previously achievable. By using the lithium depletion boundary method and
isochrone fitting based on much improved new theoretical evolutionary models
for low mass stars, it is arguable that we will soon have have much better age
scales for clusters and star-forming regions. With improved optical and near-IR
cameras, we are just now beginning to extend the mass function of open clusters
like the Pleiades into the regime below the hydrogen burning mass limit.
Meanwhile, observations in star-forming regions are in principle capable of
identifying objects down to of order 10 Jupiter masses.Comment: 13 pages, including 3 embedded figures (4 EPS files). To appear in
"11th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun," ed. R.
J. Garcia Lopez, R. Rebolo, and M. R. Zapatero Osori
Cool stars in NGC 2547 and pre main sequence lithium depletion
We present the results of a spectroscopic survey of X-ray selected, low-mass
candidate members of the young open cluster NGC 2547. Using a combination of
photometry, spectroscopic indices and radial velocities we refine our candidate
list and then use our spectroscopy to study the progression of lithium
depletion in low-mass pre main sequence stars. We derive lithium abundances or
upper limits for all our candidate members, which have effective temperatures
in the range 5000>Teff>3200K, and compare these with predictions for lithium
burning and depletion provided by a number of models and also with the lithium
depletion seen in younger and older stars. We find that some models can
reproduce the lithium abundance pattern of NGC 2547 if the cluster has an age
of ~20-35Myr, which is also indicated by fits to low-mass isochrones in the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. But the lack of significant further lithium
depletion between NGC 2547 and older clusters argues for an age of at least
50Myr, more in keeping with the lack of lithium observed in even fainter NGC
2547 candidates. We show that reconciliation of these age estimates may require
additions to the physics incorporated in current generations of pre main
sequence models.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (better version of Fig.1 available
at http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~rdj/
Pre-main-sequence isochrones -- II. Revising star and planet formation timescales
We have derived ages for 13 young (<30 Myr) star-forming regions and find
they are up to a factor two older than the ages typically adopted in the
literature. This result has wide-ranging implications, including that
circumstellar discs survive longer (~10-12 Myr) and that the average Class I
lifetime is greater (~1 Myr) than currently believed.
For each star-forming region we derived two ages from colour-magnitude
diagrams. First we fitted models of the evolution between the zero-age
main-sequence and terminal-age main-sequence to derive a homogeneous set of
main-sequence ages, distances and reddenings with statistically meaningful
uncertainties. Our second age for each star-forming region was derived by
fitting pre-main-sequence stars to new semi-empirical model isochrones. For the
first time (for a set of clusters younger than 50 Myr) we find broad agreement
between these two ages, and since these are derived from two distinct mass
regimes that rely on different aspects of stellar physics, it gives us
confidence in the new age scale. This agreement is largely due to our adoption
of empirical colour-Teff relations and bolometric corrections for
pre-main-sequence stars cooler than 4000 K.
The revised ages for the star-forming regions in our sample are: ~2 Myr for
NGC 6611 (Eagle Nebula; M 16), IC 5146 (Cocoon Nebula), NGC 6530 (Lagoon
Nebula; M 8), and NGC 2244 (Rosette Nebula); ~6 Myr for {\sigma} Ori, Cep OB3b,
and IC 348; ~10 Myr for {\lambda} Ori (Collinder 69); ~11 Myr for NGC 2169; ~12
Myr for NGC 2362; ~13 Myr for NGC 7160; ~14 Myr for {\chi} Per (NGC 884); and
~20 Myr for NGC 1960 (M 36).Comment: 28 pages, 18 figures, 34 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS.
All photometric catalogues presented in this paper are available online at
the Cluster Collaboration homepage
http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/timn/Catalogues
Star Formation in the Eagle Nebula and NGC 6611
We present IZJHKL' photometry of the core of the cluster NGC 6611 in the
Eagle Nebula. This photometry is used to constrain the Initial Mass Function
(IMF) and the circumstellar disk frequency of the young stellar objects.
Optical spectroscopy of 258 objects is used to confirm membership and constrain
contamination as well as individual reddening estimates. Our overall aim is to
assess the influence of the ionizing radiation from the massive stars on the
formation and evolution of young low-mass stars and their disks. The disk
frequency determined from the JHKL' colour-colour diagram suggests that the
ionizing radiation from the massive stars has little effect on disk evolution
(Oliveira et al. 2005). The cluster IMF seems indistinguishable from those of
quieter environments; however towards lower masses the tell-tale signs of an
environmental influence are expected to become more noticeable, a question we
are currently addressing with our recently acquired ultra-deep (ACS and NICMOS)
HST images.Comment: in "Triggered Star Formation in a Turbulent ISM", IAU symposium,
poster contribution; a full version of the poster can be found at
http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~jacco/papers/IAUS237_Eagle_2006.pd
- …
