|
Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес
оригинального документа
: http://www.stsci.edu/stsci/meetings/shst2/guarnierim.html
Дата изменения: Wed Apr 26 21:48:21 2006 Дата индексирования: Sat Dec 22 12:43:59 2007 Кодировка: Поисковые слова: http www.astronomy.ru forum index.php topic 4644.0.html |
M.D. Guarnieri
Dept. of Mathematical Physic, Torino, Italy
S. Ortolani
Padua Astronomical Observatory, Italy
A. Renzini and P. Montegriffo
Dept. of Astronomy, Bologna, Italy
B. Barbuy
Univ. de Sao Paulo, Brazil
E. Bica
Univ. do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
) and NGC 6553 (
).
All this information will help in understanding both the proto-Galaxy
conditions after the initial collapse of the spheroid, and the age, dynamical
and chemical conditions of the bulge.
Keywords: globular clusters, infrared, galactic bulge
For both clusters, infrared observations have been carried out the night of
June 11, 1992, using the ESO Rockwell NICMOS-3 (HgCdTe,
pixels)
infrared camera IRAC-2 (cutoff wavelength at 2.5micron Moorwood et
al. 1992a, 1992b) mounted on the MPI/ESO 2.2m telescope at La Silla (Chile),
at image scales of
and
for both standard J (
)
and K (
) filters. Through each filter, we obtained a high
resolution image (first magnification value) of the cluster center, and four
partially overlapping images covering a
square region
centered on the cluster core (second magnification) resulting in a total field
coverage of
arcmin
. The whole set of data has been
analyzed using the package for crowded fields photometry ROMAFOT (Buonanno
et al. 1979,1983).
Separate sky frames located at
from the cluster center were also
observed, in each filter and magnification, for sky subtraction purpose. All
images are the average of 60 frames of 1 sec integration time. The observations
were carried with seeing
.
Eight SAAO standards (kindly provided by Dr. Ian Glass) were observed during the run and most of them on at least two positions of the array. See Ferraro et al. (1993) for the details regarding the calibration curve.
The optical VI sample, coming from HST observations (Ortolani et al., 1995), has been tied to the IR coordinate system using a linear interpolation, and a combined catalogue of 1426 and 961 VIJK stars has been created, for NGC6553 and NGC6528, respectively.
Figures 1 and 2 present the composite NGC6553 and NGC6528 CMDs for all the stars in common between the infrared and optical sample. The main features can be summarized as follow:
6.4 (NGC6553) and K
7.3 (NGC6528). Both figures show a
turnover of the (V,V-K) CMDs due to the same blanketing effects of the cool
stars.
;
)
The main characteristics, derived from figure 1, are:
is deduced.
and at
. This could be identified with the so-called ``RGB-bump''. The
possibility, however, that it is due simply to a blend with the field,
background HB cannot be ruled out.
giving an heliocentric distance of 5.38 Kpc. This distance
is slightly higher than previously published data by Ortolani et al.
(1990).
and
that is
and
, which are exceptionally high
values for a globular cluster.
0.005, which corresponds to [Fe/H] =
-0.18
0.17 in the Kuchinski et al. calibration. This value is
consistent to (
) derived from the high-dispersion
analysis of the giant III-17 by Barbuy et al. (1992).
method calculated on the final VIJK sample, yield a mean value of
.
;
)
The main characteristics, derived from figure 2, are:
is deduced.
and at
. This could be identified with the so-called ``RGB-bump'' but
still in this case we cannot ruled out the possibility of a blending with
a field, background HB.
giving an heliocentric distance of 8.53 Kpc.
As in the previous case, this distance is slightly higher than previously
published data by Ortolani et al. (1992).
and
, that is,
and
.
0.005, which corresponds to
[Fe/H] = -0.07
0.17. This value is consistent to (
)
derived by Ortolani et al. (1995).
method calculated on the final VIJK sample, yield a mean value of
.
We are grateful to the ESO organization for the allocation of observing time. We also thank Hans Gemperlein for the help during the observing run. MDG acknowledges the Universitá and Osservatorio Astronomico of Torino for their support.
Barbuy, B., Castro, S., Ortolani, S., & Bica, E. 1992, A&A 259, 607
Buonanno, R., Corsi, C.E., De Biase, G.A., & Ferraro, I. 1979, in Image Processing in Astronomy, ed, G. Sedmak, M. Capaccioli, & R.J. Allen, Trieste Obs., Trieste, 354
Buonanno, R., Buscema, G., Corsi, C.E., Ferraro, I., & Iannicola, G. 1983, A&A, 126, 278
Ferraro, F.R., Fusi Pecci, F., Guarnieri, M.D., Moneti, A., Origlia, L., & Testa, V. 1993, MNRAS, 266, 829
Kuchinski, L.E., Frogel, J.A., & Terndrup, D.M. 1995, A&A 109, 1131
Moorwood, A. & Finger, G. 1992a, The Messenger, 68, 21.
Moorwood, A., Finger, G., Biereichel, P., Delabre, B., Van Dijsseldonk, A., Huster, G., Lizon, J.L., Meyer, M., Gemperlein, H., & Moneti, A. 1992b, The Messenger, 69, 61.
Ortolani, S., Barbuy, B., & Bica, E. 1990, A&A, 236, 362
Ortolani, S., Bica, E., & Barbuy, B. 1992, A&AS, 92, 441
Ortolani, S., Barbuy, B., Bica, Marconi, G., & Renzini, A. 1995, in preparation
{