750 research outputs found
Horizontal Branch A- and B-type Stars in Globular Clusters
Globular clusters offer ideal laboratories to test the predictions of stellar
evolution. When doing so with spectroscopic analyses during the 1990s, however,
the parameters we derived for hot horizontal branch stars deviated
systematically from theoretical predictions. The parameters of cooler, A-type
horizontal branch stars, on the other hand, were consistent with evolutionary
theories. In 1999, two groups independently suggested that diffusion effects
might cause these deviations, which we verified subsequently. I will discuss
these observations and analyses and their consequences for interpreting
observations of hot horizontal branch stars.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, style files included, Invited Lecture at IAU
Symposium 224 "The A Star Puzzle
Helium-rich EHB Stars in Globular Clusters
Recent UV observations of the most massive Galactic globular clusters show a
significant population of hot stars below the zero-age HB (``blue hook''
stars), which cannot be explained by canonical stellar evolution. Stars which
suffer unusually large mass loss on the red giant branch and thus experience
the helium-core flash while descending the white dwarf cooling curve could
populate this region. They should show higher temperatures than the hottest
canonical HB stars and their atmospheres should be helium-rich and probably
C/N-rich. We have obtained spectra of blue hook stars in omega Cen and NGC 2808
to test this possibility. Our analysis shows that the blue hook stars in these
clusters reach effective temperatures well beyond the hot end of the canonical
EHB and have higher helium abundances than canonical EHB stars. These results
support the hypothesis that the blue hook stars arise from stars which ignite
helium on the white dwarf cooling curve.Comment: LaTeX, 8 pages, 3 figures, uses Kluwer style files (included), to
appear in "Extreme Horizontal Branch Stars and Related Objects", Astrophysics
and Space Science, Kluwer Academic Publishers, proceedings of the meeting
held in Keele, UK, June 16-20, 200
Rotations and Abundances of Blue Horizontal-Branch Stars in Globular Cluster M15
High-resolution optical spectra of eighteen blue horizontal-branch (BHB)
stars in the globular cluster M15 indicate that their stellar rotation rates
and photospheric compositions vary strongly as a function of effective
temperature. Among the cooler stars in the sample, at Teff ~ 8500 K, metal
abundances are in rough agreement with the canonical cluster metallicity, and
the v sin i rotations appear to have a bimodal distribution, with eight stars
at v sin i < 15 km/s and two stars at v sin i ~ 35 km/s. Most of the stars at
Teff > 10000 K, however, are slowly rotating, v sin i < 7 km/s, and their iron
and titanium are enhanced by a factor of 300 to solar abundance levels.
Magnesium maintains a nearly constant abundance over the entire range of Teff,
and helium is depleted by factors of 10 to 30 in three of the hotter stars.
Diffusion effects in the stellar atmospheres are the most likely explanation
for these large differences in composition. Our results are qualitatively very
similar to those previously reported for M13 and NGC 6752, but with even larger
enhancement amplitudes, presumably due to the increased efficiency of radiative
levitation at lower intrinsic [Fe/H]. We also see evidence for faster stellar
rotation explicitly preventing the onset of the diffusion mechanisms among a
subset of the hotter stars.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, accepted to ApJ
Spectroscopy of horizontal branch stars in NGC6752 - Anomalous results on atmospheric parameters and masses
We used the ESO VLT-FORS2 facility to collect low-resolution spectra of 51
targets distributed along the Horizontal Branch. We determined atmospheric
parameters by comparison with theoretical models through standard fitting
routines, and masses by basic equations. Results are in general in good
agreement with previous works, although not always with theoretical
expectations for cooler stars (Teff<15000 K). The calculated color excess is
systematically lower than literature values, pointing towards a possible
underestimation of effective temperatures. Moreover, we find two groups of
stars at Teff=14000 K and at Teff=27000$ K that present anomalies with respect
to the general trend and expectations. We suppose that the three peculiar
bright stars at Teff=14000 K are probably affected by an enhanced stellar wind.
For the eight Extreme Horizontal Branch stars at Teff=27000 K which show
unusually high masses we find no plausible explanation. While most of our
results agree well with the predictions of standard horizontal branch
evolution, we still have problems with the low masses we derive in certain
temperature ranges. We believe that Kurucz ATLAS9 LTE model atmospheres with
solar-scaled abundances are probably inadequate for these temperature ranges.
Concerning the group of anomalous stars at Teff=27000 K, a Kolmogorov-Smirnov
test indicates that there is only an 8.4% probability that these stars are
randomly drawn from the general distribution in the color-magnitude diagram.
This is not conclusive but points out that these stars could be both (and
independently) spectroscopically and photometrically peculiar with respect to
the general Extreme Horizontal Branch population.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, accepted for pubblication in A&A. Replaced for
typos and better LaTeX outpu
Spectroscopy of horizontal branch stars in Omega Centauri
We analyze the reddening, surface helium abundance and mass of 115 horizontal
branch (HB) and blue hook (BH) stars in OmegaCentauri, spanning the HB from the
blue edge of the instability strip to Teff~50000K. The mean cluster reddening
is E(B-V)=0.115+-0.004, in good agreement with previous estimates, but we
evidence a pattern of differential reddening in the cluster area. The stars in
the western half are more reddened than in the southwest quadrant by 0.03-0.04
magnitudes. We find that the helium abundances measured on low-resolution
spectra are systematically lower by ~0.25 dex than the measurements based on
higher resolution. No difference in helium abundance is detected between
OmegaCentauri and three comparison clusters, and the stars in the range
11500-20000K follow a trend with temperature, which probably reflects a
variable efficiency of the diffusion processes. There is mild evidence that two
families of extreme HB (EHB) stars (Teff>20000K) could exist, as observed in
the field, with ~15% of the objects being helium depleted by a factor of ten
with respect to the main population. The distribution of helium abundance above
30000K is bimodal, but we detect a fraction of He-poor objects lower than
previous investigations. The observations are consistent with these being stars
evolving off the HB. Their spatial distribution is not uniform, but this
asymmetric distribution is only marginally significative. We also find that EHB
stars with anomalously high spectroscopic mass could be present in
OmegaCentauri, as previously found in other clusters. The derived
temperature-color relation reveals that stars hotter than 11000K are fainter
than the expectations of the canonical models in the U band, while no anomaly
is detected in B and V. This behavior, not observed in NGC6752, is a new
peculiarity of OmegaCentauri HB stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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