- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/300/665
- Title:
- HST VI Photometry of Six LMC Old Globular Clusters
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/300/665
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The following tables contain the results of photometry performed on Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 images of the Large Magellanic Cloud globular clusters NGC 1754, 1835, 1898, 1916, 2005, and 2019. The magnitudes reported here were measured from Planetary Camera F555W and F814W images using DoPHOT (Schechter, Mateo, & Saha 1993) and afterwards transformed to Johnson V/Kron-Cousins I using equation 9 of Holtzman et al. (1995PASP..107.1065H). We carried out photometry on both long (1500 sec combined in F555W, 1800 sec in F814W) and short (40 sec combined in F555W, 60 sec in F814W) exposures. Where the short exposure photometry produced smaller errors, we report those magnitudes in place of those measured from the long exposures. For each star, we give an integer identifier, its x and y pixel position as measured in the F555W PC image, its V and I magnitude, the photometric errors reported by DoPHOT, both the V and I DoPHOT object types (multiplied by 10 if the reported magnitude was measured in the short exposure frame), and a flag if the star was removed during our procedure for statistical field star subtraction. Summary of data reduction and assessment of photometric accuracy: Cosmic ray rejection, correction for the y-dependent CTE effect (Holtzman et al. 1995a), geometric distortion correction, and bad pixel flagging were applied to the images before performing photometry. For the photometry, we used version 2.5 of DoPHOT, modified by Eric Deutsch to handle floating-point images. We found that there were insufficient numbers of bright, isolated stars in the PC frames for producing aperture corrections. Aperture corrections as a function of position in the frame were instead derived using WFPC2 point spread functions kindly provided by Peter Stetson. As these artificially generated aperture corrections agree well with ones derived from isolated stars in the WF chips, we trust that they are reliable to better than 0.05 mag. In agreement with the report of Whitmore & Heyer (1997), we found an offset in mean magnitudes between the short- and long-exposure photometry. We corrected for this effect by adjusting the short-exposure magnitudes to match, on average, those of the long exposures. Finally, we merged the short- and long- exposure lists of photometry as described above and transformed the magnitudes from the WFPC2 system to Johnson V/Kron-Cousins I, applying the Holtzman et al. (1995PASP..107.1065H) zero points. Statistical field star subtraction was performed using color-magnitude diagrams of the field stars produced from the combined WF frames. Completeness and random and systematic errors in the photometry were extensively modelled through artificial star tests. Crowding causes the completeness to be a strong function of position in the frame, with detection being most difficult near the cluster centers. In addition, we found that crowding introduces systematic errors in the photometry, generally <0.05 mag, that depend on the V-I and V of the star. Fortunately, these errors are well-understood. However, unknown errors in the zero points may persist at the ~0.05 mag level.
« Previous |
11 - 17 of 17
|
Next »
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/116/1757
- Title:
- M30 UBV photometry
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/116/1757
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present F555W (V), F439W (B), and F336W (U) photometry of 9507 stars in the central 2' of the dense, post-core-collapse cluster M30 (NGC 7099) derived from Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 images. These data are used to study the mix of stellar populations in the central region of the cluster. Forty-eight blue straggler stars are identified; they are found to be strongly concentrated toward the cluster center. The specific frequency of blue stragglers, F_BSS_=N(BSS)/N(V<V_HB_+2), is 0.25+/-0.05 in the inner region of M30 (r<20"), significantly higher than the frequency found in other clusters: F_BSS_=0.05-0.15. The shape of M30's blue straggler luminosity function resembles the prediction of the collisional formation model, and is inconsistent with the binary merger model of Bailyn & Pinsonneault (1995ApJ...439..705B). An unusually blue star (B=18.6, B-V=-0.97), possibly a cataclysmic variable based on its color, is found about 1.2" from the crowded cluster center; the photometric uncertainty for this star is large, however, because of the presence of a very close neighbor. Bright red giant stars (B<16.6) appear to be depleted by a factor of 2-3 in the inner r<10" relative to fainter giants, subgiants, and main-sequence turnoff stars (95% significance). We confirm that there is a radial gradient in the color of the overall cluster light, going from B-V~0.82 at r~1' to B-V~0.45 in the central 10". The central depletion of the bright red giants is responsible for about half of the observed color gradient; the rest of the gradient is caused by the relative underabundance of faint red main-sequence stars near the cluster center (presumably a result of mass segregation). The luminosity function of M30's evolved stars does not match the luminosity function shape derived from standard stellar evolutionary models: the ratio of the number of bright giants to the number of turnoff stars in the cluster is 30% higher than predicted by the model (3.8{sigma} effect), roughly independent of red giant brightness over the range M_V_=-2 to +2.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/122/431
- Title:
- Star Clusters in M33
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/122/431
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In this paper we present the discovery of 60 star clusters in 20 multiband Hubble Space Telescope (HST) WFPC2 fields in M33. The fields sample a variety of environments, from outer regions to spiral arms and central regions, as well as a range of galactocentric distances. The HST spatial resolution allowed us to penetrate the crowded, spiral arm regions of M33 yielding the first unbiased, representative sample of star clusters for this galaxy. We discuss the separation of clusters from stellar sources, and from other extended sources such as star-forming regions, H II regions, and supernova remnants. For the clusters we present multiband images and discuss morphology, location, and integrated photometry. Measured cluster colors and magnitudes are presented. The cluster density in our sample as a function of galactocentric distance yields an estimate of 690 total clusters in M33.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/113/669
- Title:
- Stars in M13 core
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/113/669
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We study the dense core of the globular cluster Messier 13 (NGC 6205) using pre-refurbishment Planetary Camera-I images obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope. Short exposures (60s) through the F555W and F785LP filters (similar to Johnson V and I, respectively) have been used to obtain V and I photometry of 2877 stars brighter than V~20 in a 1.25arcmin^2^ region of the cluster including its core and extending out to r~66arcsec (2.3pc) from its center. The sample is complete to V~=18.3 (the main sequence turnoff) and the 1{sigma} photometric error is about 0.1mag. We find 15 blue straggler star candidates and 10 other possible blue stragglers in this region of M13. Their specific frequency is in the range F_(BSS)=0.04-0.07, comparable to what is observed near the centers of other dense clusters. A comparison between M13's observed V band stellar luminosity function and a theoretical model (Bergbusch & Vandenberg, 1992ApJS...81..163B) for the luminosity function of an old, metal-poor cluster shows that the model predicts too few of the brightest red giants (V~12.5-15) by a factor of two relative to subgiants/turnoff stars (>6{sigma} effect). The radial distributions of red giants, blue stragglers, and subgiants are consistent with one another, and are well fit by a King profile of core radius r_(core)_=38+/-6arcsec (90% confidence limits) or 1.3pc. Stars in the blue horizontal branch of M13, however, appear to be centrally depleted relative to other stellar types. We combine data from three dense ``King model clusters,'' M13, M3, and 47 Tuc, and two post core collapse clusters, M30 and M15, and compare the distributions of various stellar types as a function of (r/r_(half light)_) and (r/r_(core)_). The horizontal branch stars in the combined sample appear to be centrally depleted relative to the giants (97% significance), this depletion is only a 1-2{sigma} effect in each of the clusters taken individually. The blue stragglers in the combined sample are centrally concentrated relative to the giants. (Copyright) 1997 American Astronomical Society.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/287/769
- Title:
- UV photometry of NGC 6397
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/287/769
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The core of the nearby and very concentrated globular cluster NGC 6397 has been imaged through the f/96-F140W, f/48-F140W, f/96-F210M and f/48-F220W ultraviolet filters of the Faint Object Camera on board the Hubble Space Telescope down to an ultraviolet limiting magnitude of ~19. The most interesting objects in the field of view are six very bright centrally concentrated, blue stragglers observed for the first time in the UV. Using these and other data from ground-based observations, we have been able to deduce from a comparison with Kurucz's atmosphere models, temperatures of ~10000K and masses of ~1.6M_{sun}_ for the four brightest ones, which is remarkably close to twice the turn-off mass of NGC 6397. This finding supports the idea that two-star mechanisms (collisions, mergers) are at the origin of the blue stragglers in the core of NGC 6397. Since the central density is very high, collisions between main sequence stars are frequent, therefore providing the best formation mechanism. We have computed the number of such collisions in the core of NGC 6397 and found it to be of the same order as the number of bright blue stragglers observed there. Thanks to the HST resolution, we have also been able to resolve one object, previously classified as a yellow straggler, into a blend of a blue straggler and three redder stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/366/498
- Title:
- VI photometry of M33 star clusters
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/366/498
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have detected 102 star clusters in M 33, from 35 deep Hubble Space Telescope (HST) WFPC2 fields taken from our program and from the HST archive. Twenty-eight fields have V and I band imaging, and an additional seven fields are imaged in a single V filter. Eighty-two of the clusters were previously unknown. Integrated photometry reveals that 25 clusters have (V-I) colors typical of those found in Galactic globular clusters (only ten of these objects were previously known). Our discovery of 15 new globular cluster candidates increases previous estimates of the old cluster population in M 33 by ~60%. An additional eleven objects (only two were previously known) have colors expected for intermediate age clusters. The new clusters have a range of ages from 6 million years to >15Gyrs, and masses between 10^2^M_{sun}_-10^6^M_{sun}_, although these parameters are estimated from only one color.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/119/1748
- Title:
- WFPC 2 imaging of young LMC clusters
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/119/1748
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have carried out Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) F160BW, F555W, and F656N imaging of four young populous clusters: NGC 330, in the Small Magellanic Cloud, and NGC 1818, 2004, and 2100, in the Large Magellanic Cloud. We report photometric results for these four clusters, including identification using photometric colors of the cluster Be star population. We present theoretical WFPC2 and broadband colors and bolometric corrections for LMC and SMC metallicities. The use of the far-UV F160BW filter enables accurate determination of the effective temperatures for stars in the vicinity of the main-sequence turnoff and on the unevolved main sequence.