scholarly journals Massive extragalactic eclipsing binaries

2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (14) ◽  
pp. 198-198
Author(s):  
Alceste Z. Bonanos

Masses, radii and luminosities of distant stars can only be measured accurately in eclipsing binaries. The most massive eclipsing binary currently known is WR 20a, which consists of two ~ 80 M⊙ stars in a 3.7 d orbit. Analogs of WR 20a are bound to exist both in massive stellar clusters in our Galaxy and in nearby galaxies. The nearest ones are located in the clusters near the Galactic Center: the Center, Arches, and Quintuplet clusters. The severe amount of reddening in the galactic disk makes the study of galactic clusters challenging. However, with current 8-m class telescopes, the study of massive stars in nearby galaxies is also feasible. The nearest Local Group galaxies (LMC, SMC, M 31, M 33) provide the perfect laboratory for studying massive stars and determining their properties as a function of metallicity. Such studies will constrain models, confirm the dependence of evolution on metallicity and help understand the rate and nature of supernovae and gamma-ray bursts.

2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S303) ◽  
pp. 252-253
Author(s):  
Francisco Najarro ◽  
Diego de la Fuente ◽  
Tom R. Geballe ◽  
Don F. Figer

AbstractThe Galactic center (GC) region hosts three of the most massive resolved young clusters in the Local Group and constitutes a test bed for studying the star formation history of the region and inferring the possibility of a top-heavy scenario. Further, recent detection of a large number of apparently isolated massive stars within the inner 80 pc of the Galactic center has raised fundamental questions regarding massive star formation in a such a dense and harsh environment. Noting that most of the isolated massive stars have spectral analogs in the Quintuplet cluster, we have undertaken a combined analysis of the infrared spectra of both selected Quintuplet stars and the isolated objects using Gemini spectroscopy. We present preliminary results, aiming at α-elements versus iron abundances, stellar properties, ages and radial velocities which will differentiate the top-heavy and star-formation scenarios.


Author(s):  
Jovana Petrovic ◽  
Tijana Prodanovic ◽  
Milos Kovacevic

Diffuse gamma ray emission from the Galactic center at 2-3 GeV, as well as the 12 TeV gamma ray excess in the Galactic disk, remain open for debate and represent the missing puzzles in the complete picture of the high-energy Milky Way sky. Our papers emphasize the importance of understanding all of the populations that contribute to the diffuse gamma background in order to discriminate between the astrophysical sources such as supernova remnants and pulsars, and something that is expected to be seen in gamma rays and is much more exotic - dark matter. We analyze two separate data sets that have been measured in different energy ranges from the ?Fermi-LAT? and ?Milagro? telescopes, using these as a powerful tool to limit and test our analytical source population models. We model supernova remnants and pulsars, estimating the number of still undetected ones that contribute to the diffuse background, trying to explain both the Galactic center and the 12 TeV excess. Furthermore, we aim to predict the number of soon to be detected sources with new telescopes, such as the ?HAWC?.


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 572-572
Author(s):  
D. Minniti ◽  
M.G. Lattanzi ◽  
J.J. Claria ◽  
G. Massone ◽  
R. Casalegno

Three windows towards the Galactic bulge, located at (l, b) = (1.6,-2.8), (5.2,-3.5), and (4.2,-4.8), were identified from deep astrometric plates. Deep BVRI CCD photometry of these fields reaching V = 18.5 was obtained at the ESO Dutch telescope. The color-color and color magnitude diagrams of these fields allow us to select different bulge tracers, including blue horizontal branch stars, red clump giants, and RGB tip stars, as well as disk main-sequence stars. A first catalogue of some 2000 red clump giants was constructed, and measurement of their proper motions in under way. We are deriving absolute proper motions in the Hipparcos system using a two step procedure. First, plates from the Cordoba archive of the Astrographic Catalogue (epochs 1903-1913) are used in combination with recent plates from theESO GPO telescope to tie a set of intermediate magnitude field stars in the Hipparcos system of positions and proper motions. Second, deeper intermediate epoch (1958) and final epoch CCD images (epoch 1996.5) are used to determine the absolute proper motions of the fainter bulge stars. The average uncertainty in the absolute proper motion of a single giant, based on a preliminary sample of few tens of stars, is 0”.006 yr-1. This relatively small error, in combination with the sample size, would allow usto study the shape of the velocity ellipsoid for the different Galactic components present in the inner regions as function of Galactocentric distance, and also to measure an accurate distance to the Galactic center and the mass of the bulge. In addition, we identified about 20 faint objects which are potential members of the Sgr dwarf, based on their location in the color-magnitude diagrams, and are also measuring their proper motions. Other windows with measured proper motions are located along the Galactic minor axis, including Baade’s window at l, b = (1, −4) (Spaenhauer, A., Jones, B. F., &: Whitford, A. E., 1992, A3, 103, 297), and the Plaut field at l, b = (0, - 8 ) (Mendez, R. et al., 1997, in 4th ESO/CTIO Workshop on “The Galactic Center”, in press). Our proper motions are complementary, probing the kinematics off the Galactic minor axis, where the signature of rotation should be evident. The fields chosen for this study overlap fields that the MACHO project is following since 1993. Their variable star database would provide with excellent tracers of different populations. The 3-D motions of these different Galactic components would be measured for the first time. These include RR Lyrae tracers of the inner metal-poor halo, Miras, LPVs and delta Scuti stars tracers of the metal-rich bulge, and eclipsing binaries tracers of the Galactic disk (Minniti, D., et al., 1996, in IAP Coll. on “Variable Stars and the Astrophysical Returns of Microlensing Surveys”, ed. R. Ferlet, p. 257; Alcock, C, et al., 1997, astro-ph/9707311).


2000 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 182-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitar D. Sasselov

AbstractThe two nearby galaxies, M31 and M33, are stepping stones for most of our current efforts to understand the evolving universe at large scales. We are undertaking a long term project, called DIRECT, to improve the direct distance estimate to M31 and M33. The massive photometry we have obtained as part of our project over the past 3 years provides us with very good light curves for known and new Cepheid variables, a large number of eclipsing binaries and other variable stars.


Author(s):  
Philip Massey ◽  
Kathryn F. Neugent ◽  
Emily M. Levesque

The nearby galaxies of the Local Group can act as our laboratories in helping to bridge the gap between theory and observations. In this review, we will describe the complications of identifying samples of OB stars, yellow and red supergiants, and Wolf–Rayet stars, and what we have so far learned from these studies. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Bridging the gap: from massive stars to supernovae’.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (S307) ◽  
pp. 92-93
Author(s):  
N. Britavskiy ◽  
A. Z. Bonanos ◽  
A. Mehner

AbstractWe present the first systematic survey of dusty massive stars (RSGs, LBVs, sgB[e]) in nearby galaxies, with the goal of understanding their importance in massive star evolution. Using the fact that these stars are bright in mid-infrared colors due to dust, we provide a technique for selecting and identifying dusty evolved stars based on the results of Bonanos et al. (2009, 2010), Britavskiy et al. (2014), and archival Spitzer/IRAC photometry. We present the results of our spectroscopic follow-up of luminous infrared sources in the Local Group dwarf irregular galaxies: Pegasus, Phoenix, Sextans A and WLM. The survey aims to complete the census of dusty massive stars in the Local Group.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S272) ◽  
pp. 515-516
Author(s):  
Eugenia Koumpia ◽  
Alceste Z. Bonanos

AbstractWesterlund 1 is one of the most massive young clusters known in the Local Group, with an age of 3-5 Myr. It contains an assortment of rare evolved massive stars, such as blue, yellow and red supergiants, Wolf-Rayet stars, a luminous blue variable, and a magnetar, as well as 4 massive eclipsing binary systems (Wddeb, Wd13, Wd36, WR77o, see Bonanos 2007). The eclipsing binaries present a rare opportunity to constrain evolutionary models of massive stars, the distance to the cluster and furthermore, to determine a dynamical lower limit for the mass of a magnetar progenitor. Wddeb, being a detached system, is of great interest as it allows determination of the masses of 2 of the most massive unevolved stars in the cluster. We have analyzed spectra of all 4 eclipsing binaries, taken in 2007-2008 with the 6.5 meter Magellan telescope at Las Campanas Observatory, Chile, and present fundamental parameters (masses, radii) for their component stars.


2019 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Takuya Inoue ◽  
Eiichiro Komatsu ◽  
Wako Aoki ◽  
Takeshi Chiba ◽  
Toru Misawa ◽  
...  

Abstract Redshifts of an astronomical body measured at multiple epochs (e.g., separated by 10 yr) are different due to the cosmic expansion. This so-called Sandage–Loeb test offers a direct measurement of the expansion rate of the Universe. However, acceleration in the motion of the Solar System with respect to the cosmic microwave background also changes redshifts measured at multiple epochs. If not accounted for, it yields a biased cosmological inference. To address this, we calculate the acceleration of the Solar System with respect to the Local Group of galaxies to quantify the change in the measured redshift due to local motion. Our study is motivated by the recent determination of the mass of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), which indicates a significant fraction of the Milky Way mass. We find that the acceleration towards the Galactic Center dominates, which gives a redshift change of 7 cm s−1 in 10 yr, while the accelerations due to the LMC and M 31 cannot be ignored, depending on lines of sight. We create all-sky maps of the expected change in redshift and the corresponding uncertainty, which can be used to correct for this effect.


Author(s):  
Tejpreet Kaur ◽  
Sandeep Sahijpal

Abstract We present galactic chemical evolution (GCE) models of the short-lived radionuclides (SLRs), 26Al, 36Cl, 41Ca, 53Mn and 60Fe, across the entire Milky Way galaxy. The objective is to understand the spatial and temporal distribution of the SLRs in the galaxy. The gamma-ray observations infer widespread distribution of 26Al and 60Fe across the galaxy. The signatures of the SLRs in the early solar system (ESS) are found in meteorites. We present homogeneous GCE simulation models for SLRs across the galaxy. We also develop a set of heterogeneous GCE models to understand the evolution of the galaxy within independent spatial grids of area, 0.1–1 kpc2. These grids evolve distinctly in terms of nucleosynthetic contributions of massive stars. We succeeded in simulating the formation and evolution of generations of stellar clusters/association. Based on the formulation, we provide a novel method to amalgamate the origin of the solar system with the gradual evolution of the galaxy along with a self-consistent origin of SLRs. We explore the possibility of the birth of the solar system in an environment where one of the stellar clusters formed ≥ 25 Million years earlier. The decaying 53Mn and 60Fe remnants from the evolved massive stars from the cluster probably contaminated the local medium associated with the presolar molecular cloud. A Wolf-Rayet wind from a distant massive star, belonging to a distinct cluster, probably contributed, 26Al (and 41Ca) to the presolar cloud. The irradiation production of 7,10Be and 36Cl occurred later in ESS.


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (S289) ◽  
pp. 173-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alceste Z. Bonanos

AbstractEclipsing binaries are powerful tools for determining the fundamental parameters of stars and, therefore, for measuring accurate, independent distances to nearby galaxies. I present distance measurements that are in progress based on early-type eclipsing binary systems in several Local Group galaxies at a range of metallicities, and discuss the strengths of the method, the limitations and possible sources of systematic error. The goal is to establish several local stepping stones along the extragalactic distance ladder, which will help calibrate the Cepheid period–luminosity relation and thus resolve the ongoing controversy about the distance scale, with its ramifications for cosmology and stellar ages.


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