scholarly journals RR Lyrae Stars in Globular Clusters

2000 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 165-171
Author(s):  
Alistair R. Walker

AbstractOf the several types of variable stars that occur in globular clusters, RR Lyrae stars have deservedly received the most attention. These stars are ideally suited for comparisons between evolution and pulsation theory, they play a prominent role in distance determinations, and are valuable tracers of the oldest stellar populations. After a brief discussion of technical aspects, we review some of the recent observational work.

2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S266) ◽  
pp. 411-411
Author(s):  
Claudia Greco ◽  
Gisella Clementini ◽  
E. V. Held ◽  
E. Poretti ◽  
M. Catelan ◽  
...  

AbstractΛ cold-dark-matter hierarchical models of galaxy formation suggest that the halo of the Milky Way (MW) has been assembled, at least in part, through accretion of protogalactic fragments partially resembling the present-day dwarf spheroidal (dSph) satellites of the MW. Investigation of the stellar populations of the MW's globular clusters (GCs) and dSph companions can thus provide excellent tests to infer the dominant Galaxy-formation scenario, whether merger/accretion or cloud collapse. Pulsating variable stars offer a very powerful tool in this context, since variables of different types allow tracing the different stellar generations in a galaxy and to reconstruct the galaxy's star-formation history and assembly back to the first epochs of galaxy formation. In particular, the RR Lyrae stars, belonging to the old population (t > 10 Gyr), witnessed the epoch of halo formation, and thus hold a crucial role to identify the MW satellites that may have contributed to build up the Galactic halo. In the MW, most GCs with an RR Lyrae population sharply divide into two distinct groups (Oosterhoff types I and II) based on the mean periods and relative proportion of fundamental-mode (RRab) and first-overtone (RRc) RR Lyrae stars. On the other hand, the Galactic-halo field RR Lyrae stars show a dominance of Oosterhoff I properties. Here, we investigate the Oosterhoff properties of a number of different stellar systems, starting from relatively undisturbed dwarf galaxies (the Fornax dSph and its globular clusters), through distorted and tidally disrupting ones (the Bootes and Canes Venatici II dSphs), to possible final relics of the disruption process (the Galactic globular cluster NGC 2419). We are addressing the crucial question of whether the RR Lyrae pulsation properties in these systems conform to the Oosterhoff dichotomy characterizing the MW variables. If they do not, the Galaxy's halo cannot have been assembled by dSph-like protogalactic fragments resembling the present-day dSph companions of the MW. We have reduced and combined long time series from different telescopes, both ground- and space-based. Variable stars have been detected with image-subtraction techniques using the package isis2.1. Periods, amplitudes and Oosterhoff type for all variable stars, as well as color–magnitude diagrams of the stellar populations are discussed for each stellar cluster analyzed.


1975 ◽  
Vol 67 ◽  
pp. 541-543
Author(s):  
A. V. Mironov ◽  
N. N. Samus'

The dependences of the numbers of variable stars in globular clusters on the chemical composition are studied. For given metallicity the numbers of RR Lyrae stars reduced to some definite total number of stars in the cluster are different for the two groups of globular clusters introduced by Mironov.


1993 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 337-337
Author(s):  
Martha L. Hazen

A search for variable stars in the globular cluster NGC 6544 has revealed only one possible short period variable within the tidal radius of the cluster. A search in NGC 6642 yielded 16 new RR Lyrae stars within the tidal radius and 5 new field RRs. The previously discovered (Hoffleit 1972) V1 is a slow variable, and V2 is an RR Lyrae star. Photometry of the variables within the tidal radius gives a mean B for the horizontal branch of < B > = 17.0 mag. With E(B – V) = 0.37 mag and (B – V) = 0.35 mag for RR Lyraes, a value for V(HB) = 16.3 mag is derived. This is about one mag fainter than previous estimates (Webbink 1985), and places NGC 6642 at a distance of approximately 7.9 kpc.


1993 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 338-338
Author(s):  
N.A. Silbermann ◽  
H.A. Smith ◽  
M. Bolte

AbstractWe present preliminary results of a program of CCD photometry of RR Lyrae variable stars in the globular clusters NGC 6388 and M15.


1973 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 88-94
Author(s):  
E. H. Geyer

It has been shown by the author (Geyer, 1967), and independently by Dickens and Woolley (1967), that there occur horizontal branch stars well within the RR Lyrae variable gap of the c–m-diagram of ω Centauri. Variability of these objects is not known, and presumably is unlikely, because the cluster is so well studied for variable stars. For the observationally best studied globular clusters M3, M13, M15 and M92 (Sandage, 1969), this phenomenon is not found. The author’s original published c–w-diagram of NGC 5139 showed about 10 stars with (B–V)≥0.2 and V-magnitudes comparable with those of RR Lyrae stars of the cluster. Unpublished photoelectric measurements of some of these stars, carried out in 1968 with the 40-in photometric reflector of ESO by the author, support this finding. Also the study of blue horizontal branch stars by Newell, Rodgers and Searle (1969) of the Herst-monceux catalog of ω Centauri (Woolley et al., 1966) confirms these results, the importance of which for the understanding of the horizontal branch stars and RR Lyrae variables is obvious.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (S353) ◽  
pp. 31-34
Author(s):  
Dante Minniti ◽  
María Gabriela Navarro

AbstractIn the efforts to map the Milky Way structure, the central regions have remained very difficult to probe. The VISTA Variables in the Vía Láctea Survey (VVV) is a near-IR variability Survey that scans 560 sq.deg. across the Milky Way bulge and an adjacent section of the southern mid-plane. The main goal of the VVV Survey is to build a 3D map of the structure of the inner Galaxy and characterize its stellar populations. This survey has discovered different kinds of objects, such as globular clusters, Microlensing events, RR Lyrae stars, Cepheids, WITs, among others. The extension of the Survey (VVVX) is observing until 2020, tripling the areal coverage, and complementing the variability studies done by the VVV Survey.


1973 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 187-195
Author(s):  
Pierre Demarque

Traditionally, cluster variables have been used as distance indicators and have in this sense played an important role in our understanding of stellar evolution. In particular, the determination of the distance moduli of globular clusters and of the absolute magnitude of the main sequence turnoff, thus yielding the ages of the cluster, have relied heavily in the past on observations of RR Lyrae stars.


1973 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 229-234
Author(s):  
A. V. Mironov

AbstractThe helium abundance Y in the envelopes of RR Lyrae stars in globular clusters has been estimated. The values of Y range from 0.07 to 0.59. The properties of variable stars in globular clusters of two types distinguished by a type of dependence of the horizontal branch form on the chemical composition are compared. The clusters of type I are shown to be on the average poorer in RR Lyrae stars than those of type II. The RR Lyrae stars in type I clusters are on the average brighter by 0.1 mag. It is found that as Y increases, the cluster richness in W Virginis variables decreases.


2000 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 261-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barton Pritzl ◽  
Horace A. Smith ◽  
Márcio Catelan ◽  
Allen V. Sweigart

AbstractNew observations show that RR Lyrae stars in the metal-rich globular clusters NGC 6388 and NGC 6441 have unusually long periods, which indicate that the horizontal branches of these clusters are unusually bright for their metallicities, as predicted by Sweigart & Catelan (1998).


2022 ◽  
Vol 258 (1) ◽  
pp. 20
Author(s):  
Iminhaji Ablimit ◽  
Gang Zhao ◽  
Uy. Teklimakan ◽  
Jian-Rong Shi ◽  
Kunduz Abdusalam

Abstract In order to study the Milky Way, RR Lyrae (RRL) variable stars identified by Gaia, ASAS-SN, and ZTF sky survey projects have been analyzed as tracers in this work. Photometric and spectroscopic information of 3417 RRLs including proper motions, radial velocity, and metallcity are obtained from observational data of Gaia, LAMOST, GALAH, APOGEE, and RAVE. Precise distances of RRLs with typical uncertainties less than 3% are derived by using a recent comprehensive period–luminosity–metallicity relation. Our results from kinematical and chemical analysis provide important clues for the assembly history of the Milky Way, especially for the Gaia–Sausage ancient merger. The kinematical and chemical trends found in this work are consistent with those of recent simulations that indicated that the Gaia–Sausage merger had a dual origin in the Galactic thick disk and halo. As recent similar works have found, the halo RRL sample in this work contains a subset of radially biased orbits besides a more isotropic component. This higher orbital anisotropy component amounts to β ≃ 0.8, and it contributes between 42% and 83% of the halo RRLs at 4 < R( kpc) < 20.


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