- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/89/85
- Title:
- Blue and red supergiants in M33
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/89/85
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a catalog of blue and red stars in M33 based on photographic photometry of over 65,000 objects extracted from plates taken with the 3.6m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) and the 2.0m Rozhen (Bulgarian) Telescope. The completeness limit of the various surveys are estimated here to be V=19.5mag for those stars situated in crowed associations, and V=20.0mag for stars in the interarm fields. We list magnitudes and positions for 2112 blue stars, defined by (U-V)<0.0mag, and V<19.5mag, and 389 red stars defined by (B-V)>1.8mag and V<19.5mag. Of these, 1156 are candidate O stars on the basis of (U-V)<-0.9mag.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/373/24
- Title:
- Blue compact galaxies from SBS
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/373/24
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The work studies of the environment of low-mass galaxies with active star formation (SF) and a possible trigger of SF bursts due to gravitational interaction. Following the study by Taylor et al. (1995ApJS...99..427T), we extend the search for possible disturbing galaxies of various masses to a much larger sample of 86 BCGs from the sky region of the Second Byurakan survey (SBS). The BCG magnitudes and radial velocities are revised and up-dated. The sample under study is separated by the criteria: EW([O III]5007)>45{AA} and V_h_<6000km/s nd should be representative of all low-mass galaxies which experience SF bursts.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/396/818
- Title:
- Blue early-type galaxies in Galaxy Zoo
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/396/818
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report the discovery of a population of nearby, blue early-type galaxies with high star formation rates (0.5<SFR<50M_{sun}_/yr). They are identified by their visual morphology as provided by Galaxy Zoo for Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 6 and their u-r colour. We select a volume-limited sample in the redshift range 0.02<z<0.05, corresponding to luminosities of approximately L* and above and with u-r colours significantly bluer than the red sequence. We confirm the early-type morphology of the objects in this sample and investigate their environmental dependence and star formation properties.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/127/899
- Title:
- Blue HB stars in SDSS
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/127/899
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We isolate samples of 733 bright (g<18) and 437 faint (g>18) high Galactic latitude blue horizontal-branch stars with photometry and spectroscopy in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Comparison of independent photometric and spectroscopic selection criteria indicates that contamination from F and blue straggler stars is less than 10% for bright stars (g<18) and about 25% for faint stars (g>18), and this is qualitatively confirmed by proper motions based on the USNO-A (<I/252>) catalog as first epoch. Analysis of repeated observations shows that the errors in radial velocity are ~26km/s. A relation between absolute magnitude and color is established using the horizontal branches of halo globular clusters observed by SDSS. Bolometric corrections and colors are synthesized in the SDSS filters from model spectra. The redder stars agree well in absolute magnitude with accepted values for RR Lyrae stars. The resulting photometric distances are accurate to about 0.2mag, with a median of about 25kpc. Modest clumps in phase space exist and are consistent with the previously reported tidal stream of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/108/1722
- Title:
- Blue horizontal branch stars
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/108/1722
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- A complete sample of blue horizontal branch (BHB) stars in the magnitude range 13.0<V<16.5 is isolated in two Galactic fields that have previously been searched for RR Lyrae variables: SA 57 in the Northern Polar Cap and the Lick Astrograph field RR 7 in the Anticenter (l=183{deg}, b=+37{deg}). These BHB stars are a subset of the AF stars found in the Case Low-Dispersion Northern Survey; lists of these AF stars were made available by the late Nick Sanduleak. The completeness of the sample was confirmed by reference to the photometric survey of SA 57 by Stobie & Ishida (1987AJ93..... 624S) that is complete to fainter than V=18. In the color range 0.00<(B-V)_0_<+0.20, we can distinguish the BHB stars among these AF stars by comparing them both with well known local field horizontal branch (FHB) stars and also the BHB members of the halo globular clusters M3 and M92. The criteria for this comparison include (1) a (u-B)_K_ color index (derived from photoelectric observations using the Stromgren u filter and the Johnson B and V filters) that measures the size of the Balmer jump, (2) a spectrophotometric index A that measures the steepness of the Balmer jump, and (3) a parameter D_0.2_ that is the mean width of the H{gamma} and H{delta} Balmer lines measured at 20 percent of the continuum level. These criteria give consistent results in separating BHB stars from higher gravity main sequence AF stars in the color range 0.00<(B-V)_0_<+0.20. All three photometric and spectrophotometric criteria were measured for 35 stars in the SA 57 field and 37 stars in the RR 7 field that are in the color range (B-V)_0_<+0.23 and in the magnitude range 13.0<V<16.5. For a small number of additional stars only (u-B)_K_ was obtained. Among the AF stars that are fainter than B=13 and bluer than (B-V)_0_=+0.23, about half of those in the SA 57 field and about one third of those in the lower latitude RR 7 field are BHB stars. Isoabundance contours were located empirically in plots of the pseudoequivalent width versus (B-V)_0_ for the lines of Mg II A4481{AA}, Ca II A3933 {AA} and Fe I A4272{AA}. Solar abundances were defined by the data from main sequence stars in the Pleiades and Coma open clusters. Data from the BHB stars in M3 and M92 defined the [Fe/H]=1.5 and -2.2 isoabundance contours, respectively. Metallicities of all stars were estimated by interpolating the measured pseudoequivalent widths in these diagrams at the observed (B-V)_0_. The distribution of [Fe/H] found for the BHB stars in this way is very similar to that which we found for the RR Lyrae stars in the same fields using the Preston AS method. The space densities of these BHB stars were analyzed both separately and together with earlier observations of field BHB stars given by Arnold & Gilmore (1992MNRAS.257..225A), Sommer-Larsen & Christensen (1986MNRAS.219..537S), and Preston et al. (1991ApJ...375..121P). This analysis supports a two-component model for the halo of our Galaxy that is similar in many respects to that proposed by Hartwick [The Galaxy (Reidel, Dordrecht 1987)] although our discussion refers only to the region outside the solar circle. For Z>=35kpc, a classical spherical halo dominates which follows a R_gal_^-3.5^ space-density law and which has a HB morphology like that of the globular cluster M3 (i.e., approximately equal numbers of BHB and RR Lyrae stars). Closer to the galactic plane, there is an additional component with a much flatter galactic distribution (scale height ~2.2kpc near the Sun). The stars of the two components do not have significantly different metallicity distributions but do have slightly different distributions of the A parameter which measures the steepness of the Balmer jump; this is the only physical criterion (independent of spatial or kinematic considerations) which distinguishes between the two components. If present estimates of the local RR Lyrae star space density are correct, then the ratio of BHB stars to RR Lyrae stars is higher in the flatter halo component. The flat component would then have a bluer HB morphology (which could be interpreted as making it older) than the spherical component. In the solar neighborhood about 80 percent of the BHB stars come from the flat component and about 20 percent from the spherical component. More than half of the AF stars with V>13.0 and (B-V)_0_<+0.23 are not BHB stars but have surface gravities that are more like those expected for main sequence stars. Their measured metallicities lie in the range -0.2<[Fe/H]<-2.3. The more metal-poor of these stars are probably similar to the blue metal-poor stars that have been discussed by Preston et al. (1994AJ....108..538P) which, while they probably include globular cluster blue stragglers as a subset, must also comprise stars of other types.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/521/A18
- Title:
- Blue stars with disk photometry in NGC 6611
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/521/A18
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- NGC 6611 and its parental cloud, the Eagle Nebula (M 16), are well-studied star-forming regions, thanks to their large content of both OB stars and stars with disks and the observed ongoing star formation. In our previous studies of the Eagle Nebula, we identified 834 disk-bearing stars associated with the cloud, after detecting their excesses in NIR bands from J band to 8.0um. In this paper, we study in detail the nature of a subsample of disk-bearing stars that show peculiar characteristics. They appear older than the other members in the V vs. V-I diagram, and/or they have one or more IRAC colors at pure photospheric values, despite showing NIR excesses, when optical and infrared colors are compared.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/other/Ap/52.369
- Title:
- Blue stellar objects in strip DE=47{deg}
- Short Name:
- J/other/Ap/52.36
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This is a list of 111 blue stellar objects and individual active galaxies with excess ultraviolet continuum lying within 08h-17h in {alpha} and +45{deg} +49{deg} in {delta} (1950.0). The surveyed objects are classified in terms of activity type.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/663/267
- Title:
- Blue straggler population of globular cluster M5
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/663/267
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- By combining high-resolution HST and wide-field ground-based observations, in ultraviolet and optical bands, we study the blue straggler star (BSS) population of the galactic globular cluster M5 (NGC 5904) from its very central regions up to its periphery. The BSS distribution is highly peaked in the cluster center, decreases at intermediate radii and rises again outward. Such a bimodal distribution is similar to those previously observed in other globular clusters (M3, 47 Tucanae, NGC 6752). As for these clusters, dynamical simulations suggest that, while the majority of BSSs in M5 could be originated by stellar collisions, a significant fraction (20%-40%) of BSSs generated by mass transfer processes in primordial binaries is required to reproduce the observed radial distribution. A candidate BSS has been detected beyond the cluster tidal radius. If confirmed, this could represent an interesting case of an "evaporating" BSS.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/108/1786
- Title:
- Blue stragglers and variable stars in M3
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/108/1786
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This paper describes Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Planetary Camera-I images of the core of the dense globular cluster M3 (NGC 5272). Stellar photometry in the F555W (V) and F785LP (I) bands, with a 1 sigma photometric accuracy of about 0.1mag, has been used to construct color-magnitude diagrams of about 4700 stars above the main-sequence turnoff within r<~1' of the cluster center. We have also analyzed archival HST F336W (U) images of M3 obtained by the Wide Field/Planetary Camera-I Instrument Definition Team. The UVI data are used to identify 28 blue straggler (BS) stars within the central 0.29arcmin^2. The specific frequency of BSs in this region of M3, N(BS)/N(V<V(HB)+2)=0.094+/-0.019, is about a factor of 2-3 higher than that found by Bolte et al. [1993, ApJ, 408, L89] in a recent ground-based study of the same region, but comparable to that seen in the sparse outer parts of the same cluster and in HST observations of the core of the higher density cluster 47 Tuc. The BSs in M3 are slightly more centrally concentrated than red giant branch stars while horizontal branch stars are somewhat less concentrated than red giants. The radial distribution of V-selected subgiant and turnoff stars is well fit by a King model with a core radius r(core)=28"+/-2" (90% confidence limits), which corresponds to 1.4pc. Red giant and horizontal branch stars selected in the ultraviolet data (U<18) have a somewhat more compact distribution (r(core)=22.5"). The HST U data consist of 17 exposures acquired over a span of three days. We have used these data to isolate 40 variable stars for which relative astrometry, brightnesses, colors, and light curves are presented. A Kolmogorov-Smirnov test indicates that, typically, the variability for each star is significant at the 95% level. We identify two variable BS candidates (probably of the SX Phe type) out of a sample of ~25 BSs in which variability could have been detected. Most of the variables are RR Lyrae stars on the horizontal branch. All of them have periods P>~8h.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/632/894
- Title:
- Blue stragglers, HB and turnoff stars in 4 GC
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/632/894
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a spectroscopic analysis of HST STIS and FOS low- and intermediate-resolution spectroscopy of 55 stars in four globular clusters (47 Tucanae, M3, NGC 6752, and NGC 6397). Stars hotter than T_eff_=5750K and with a signal-to-noise ratio larger than 15 were analyzed with non-local thermodynamic equilibrium model atmospheres, and values for their effective temperatures and gravities were obtained. Using photometric fluxes, we also obtained radii, luminosities, and spectroscopic masses. Twenty-four stars in our sample are blue stragglers (BSs). Their photometric colors and magnitudes place these BSs above and redward of the clusters' zero-age main sequence: this is consistent with the gravities we find for these stars, which are lower than zero-age main-sequence gravities. A comparison with stellar evolutionary tracks shows that almost all of our BSs are in the Hertzsprung gap. This is contrary to theory, because of the short timescale expected for stars in this evolutionary phase. The mean BS mass is 1.04M_{sun}_for 14 nonvariable stars, or 1.07M_{sun}_counting all 24 BSs in our sample. For the nonvariable stars the mean BS masses for individual clusters are 1.73, 1.01, 0.95, and 0.72M_{sun}_for NGC 6397, NGC 6752, 47 Tuc, and M3, respectively. Adding the variable stars (which improves the statistics but increases the uncertainty), the mean masses become 1.27, 1.05, 0.99, and 0.99M_{sun}_, respectively. Although there is considerable scatter, the BS spectroscopic masses correlate with both effective temperature and brightness of the stars, as expected. The mean nonvariable turnoff star mass (0.58M_{sun}_) is significantly below the values determined for the BSs and below the main-sequence turnoff mass. The mean nonvariable horizontal-branch (HB) star mass is higher than expected (0.79M_{sun}_). In particular, several HB stars have masses well above the main-sequence turnoff mass. Some of these HB stars are suspected of actually being BSs, since most of them reside at ambiguous locations on the CMD, making them prone to misclassification. Values and limits to the stellar rotation rates (vsini) are imposed by fitting weak metal lines, the Ca II K line wings, or the helium lines for the hotter stars. Five BSs with reasonably constrained rotations show average and median vsini values of 109 and 100km/s, respectively, suggesting v~160km/s. At least some GC BSs are very rapid rotators, but this information cannot yet constrain their origin as stellar collision or binary mergers because of the lack of clear theoretical predictions. Six extreme HB stars have rotation rates vsini between 50 and 200km/s, which are high for these stars and might indicate a binary origin. De Marco et al. found that four BSs and two HB stars in our sample have Balmer jumps that are too large for the effective temperatures implied by the slopes of their Paschen continua. Two additional HB stars are now identified in the current study as having the same feature. For these stars, the presence of a disk of partly ionized material is suspected, although high stellar rotation rates could also partly explain the data.