scholarly journals Mixing at young ages: beryllium abundances in cool main-sequence stars of the open clusters IC 2391 and IC 2602

2011 ◽  
Vol 535 ◽  
pp. A75 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Smiljanic ◽  
S. Randich ◽  
L. Pasquini
1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 565-565
Author(s):  
G. Cayrel de Strobel ◽  
R. Cayrel ◽  
Y. Lebreton

After having studied in great detail the observational HR diagram (log Teff, Mbol) composed by 40 main sequence stars of the Hyades (Perryman et al.,1997, A&A., in press), we have tried to apply the same method to the observational main sequences of the three next nearest open clusters: Coma Berenices, the Pleiades, and Praesepe. This method consists in comparing the observational main sequence of the clusters with a grid of theoretical ZAMSs. The stars composing the observational main sequences had to have reliable absolute bolometric magnitudes, coming all from individual Hipparcos parallaxes, precise bolometric corrections, effective temperatures and metal abundances from high resolution detailed spectroscopic analyses. If we assume, following the work by Fernandez et al. (1996, A&A,311,127), that the mixing-lenth parameter is solar, the position of a theoretical ZAMS, in the (log Teff, Mbol) plane, computed with given input physics, only depends on two free parameters: the He content Y by mass, and the metallicity Z by mass. If effective temperature and metallicity of the constituting stars of the 4 clusters are previously known by means of detailed analyses, one can deduce their helium abundances by means of an appropriate grid of theoretical ZAMS’s. The comparison between the empirical (log Teff, Mbol) main sequence of the Hyades and the computed ZAMS corresponding to the observed metallicity Z of the Hyades (Z= 0.0240 ± 0.0085) gives a He abundance for the Hyades, Y= 0.26 ± 0.02. Our interpretation, concerning the observational position of the main sequence of the three nearest clusters after the Hyades, is still under way and appears to be greatly more difficult than for the Hyades. For the moment we can say that: ‒ The 15 dwarfs analysed in detailed in Coma have a solar metallicity: [Fe/H] = -0.05 ± 0.06. However, their observational main sequence fit better with the Hyades ZAMS. ‒ The mean metallicity of 13 Pleiades dwarfs analysed in detail is solar. A metal deficient and He normal ZAMS would fit better. But, a warning for absorption in the Pleiades has to be recalled. ‒ The upper main sequence of Praesepe, (the more distant cluster: 180 pc) composed by 11 stars, analysed in detail, is the one which has the best fit with the Hyades ZAMS. The deduced ‘turnoff age’ of the cluster is slightly higher than that of the Hyades: 0.8 Gyr instead of 0.63 Gyr.


2020 ◽  
Vol 72 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mai Yamashita ◽  
Yoichi Itoh ◽  
Yuhei Takagi

Abstract We investigated the chromospheric activity of 60 pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars in four molecular clouds and five moving groups. It is considered that strong chromospheric activity is driven by the dynamo processes generated by stellar rotation. In contrast, several researchers have pointed out that the chromospheres of PMS stars are activated by mass accretion from their protoplanetary disks. In this study, the Ca ii infrared triplet (IRT) emission lines were investigated utilizing medium- and high-resolution spectroscopy. The observations were conducted with Nayuta/MALLS and Subaru/HDS. Additionally, archive data obtained by Keck/HIRES, VLT/UVES, and VLT/X-Shooter were used. The small ratios of the equivalent widths indicate that Ca ii IRT emission lines arise primarily in dense chromospheric regions. Seven PMS stars show broad emission lines. Among them, four PMS stars have more than one order of magnitude brighter emission line fluxes compared to the low-mass stars in young open clusters. The four PMS stars have a high mass accretion rate, which indicates that the broad and strong emission results from a large mass accretion. However, most PMS stars exhibit narrow emission lines. No significant correlation was found between the accretion rate and flux of the emission line. The ratios of the surface flux of the Ca ii IRT lines to the stellar bolometric luminosity, $R^{\prime }_{\rm IRT}$, of the PMS stars with narrow emission lines are as large as the largest $R^{\prime }_{\rm IRT}$ of the low-mass stars in the young open clusters. This result indicates that most PMS stars, even in the classical T Tauri star stage, have chromospheric activity similar to zero-age main-sequence stars.


2011 ◽  
Vol 531 ◽  
pp. A141 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Delgado ◽  
E. J. Alfaro ◽  
J. L. Yun

2004 ◽  
Vol 2004 (IAUS224) ◽  
pp. 353-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstanze Zwintz ◽  
Marcella Marconi ◽  
Thomas Kallinger ◽  
Werner W. Weiss

2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S298) ◽  
pp. 304-309
Author(s):  
J.L. Hou ◽  
L. Chen ◽  
J.C. Yu ◽  
J. Sellwood ◽  
C. Pryor

AbstractIn this paper, we present our recent work on the evolution of abundance gradients along the Milky Way disk based on the Geneva Copenhagen Survey (GCS) and Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) data. We will also discuss the role of the LAMOST Milky Way disk survey in clarifying the properties of metallicity breaks observed through open clusters and young tracers along the Milky Way disk. It is believed that the Galactic disk forms inside-out, in which the stellar population at increasing radii is younger and more metal poor. This picture is consistent with most Galactic Chemical Evolution (GCE) models which also predict a tight correlation between the metallicity and age of stars at a given radius. However, it is only a result of “steady state" and no dynamical evolution effects were taken into account. We have selected two stellar samples from GCS and RAVE, each sample contains about 10,000 local thin-disk, main-sequence stars. We use the guiding radius which is determined by the conservation of z-direction angular momentum, to eliminate the blurring effects. And also use the effective temperature of the main sequence stars as a proxy of stellar age. It is shown that the metallicity gradient flattens as the age increases. This is not consistent with our previous GCE prediction, but can be explained by radial mixing effects. In order to further demonstrate the abundance breaks observed in the Galactic disk we have proposed, and have been carrying out, an open cluster survey project based on LAMOST. We plan to observe at least 400 open clusters in the northern Galactic sky. From the observations, we will get uniform parameters for those clusters with radial velocity and metallicities. We anticipate that this uniform open cluster sample could clarify the observed abundance break around the Milky Way disk corotation radius and also give a more robust result concerning the evolution of the abundance gradient.


1992 ◽  
Vol 135 ◽  
pp. 110-118
Author(s):  
D.W. Latham

Abstract For more than a decade we have been measuring stellar radial velocities with three almost identical digital speedometers on telescopes in Arizona and Massachusetts. By now we have accumulated nearly 100,000 measurements with a typical precision of better than 1 km s-1. One of the main scientific applications has been surveys of binaries in several different stellar environments, to study the frequency and orbital characteristics of binaries in a variety of stellar populations. A main goal is to confront theories of binary formation and evolution with observational results. With various collaborators we have investigated the binary populations among pre-main-sequence stars, in the Hyades and M67 open clusters, and in the Carney-Latham proper-motion sample. Thus, we have data for coeval samples of binaries covering a wide range of ages. One result is clear evidence for evolution of binary orbits. The orbital period at which there is a transition from circular to eccentric orbits gets longer for older samples of binaries, presumably due to tidal circularization. Another result is that the frequency of binaries does not seem to depend on the stellar population. Binaries are just as common among the oldest stars in the halo of our Galaxy as among the younger stars in the disk.


2001 ◽  
Vol 183 ◽  
pp. 331-332
Author(s):  
J.W. Chen ◽  
W.P. Chen

AbstractWe present some results of a pilot program to study star clusters with the Two-Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) observations. While 2MASS cannot resolve the cores or detect much of the main sequence of globular clusters, the homogeneity and large angular coverages make the database suitable to study young star clusters. We show that member stars are centrally concentrated in open clusters, with a density distribution markedly shallower than that for globular clusters. In NGC2506 (age 3 Gyr) giant stars appear to occupy a smaller region than main sequence stars—a natural consequence of mass segregation.


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