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Dive into the research topics where Davide Massari is active.

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Featured researches published by Davide Massari.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE PROPER MOTION (HSTPROMO) CATALOGS OF GALACTIC GLOBULAR CLUSTERS. I. SAMPLE SELECTION, DATA REDUCTION, AND NGC 7078 RESULTS

Andrea Bellini; J. Anderson; R. P. van der Marel; Laura L. Watkins; Ivan R. King; P. Bianchini; Julio Chanamé; Rupali Chandar; Adrienne Margaret Cool; F. R. Ferraro; Holland C. Ford; Davide Massari

We present the first study of high-precision internal proper motions (PMs) in a large sample of globular clusters, based on Hubble Space Telescope (HST) data obtained over the past decade with the ACS/WFC, ACS/HRC, and WFC3/UVIS instruments. We determine PMs for over 1.3 million stars in the central regions of 22 clusters, with a median number of ~60,000 stars per cluster. These PMs have the potential to significantly advance our understanding of the internal kinematics of globular clusters by extending past line-of-sight (LOS) velocity measurements to two- or three-dimensional velocities, lower stellar masses, and larger sample sizes. We describe the reduction pipeline that we developed to derive homogeneous PMs from the very heterogeneous archival data. We demonstrate the quality of the measurements through extensive Monte-Carlo simulations. We also discuss the PM errors introduced by various systematic effects, and the techniques that we have developed to correct or remove them to the extent possible. We provide in electronic form the catalog for NGC 7078 (M 15), which consists of 77,837 stars in the central 2.4 arcmin. We validate the catalog by comparison with existing PM measurements and LOS velocities, and use it to study the dependence of the velocity dispersion on radius, stellar magnitude (or mass) along the main sequence, and direction in the plane of the sky (radial/tangential). Subsequent papers in this series will explore a range of applications in globular-cluster science, and will also present the PM catalogs for the other sample clusters.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

CECI N'EST PAS A GLOBULAR CLUSTER: THE METALLICITY DISTRIBUTION OF THE STELLAR SYSTEM TERZAN 5*

Davide Massari; A. Mucciarelli; F. R. Ferraro; L. Origlia; Robert Michael Rich; B. Lanzoni; E. Dalessandro; E. Valenti; Rodrigo A. Ibata; L. Lovisi; M. Bellazzini; David B. Reitzel

We present new determinations of the iron abundance for 220 stars belonging to the stellar system Terzan 5 in the Galactic bulge. The spectra have been acquired with FLAMES at the Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory and DEIMOS at the Keck II Telescope. This is by far the largest spectroscopic sample of stars ever observed in this stellar system. From this dataset, a subsample of targets with spectra unaffected by TiO bands was extracted and statistically decontaminated from field stars. Once combined with 34 additional stars previously published by our group, a total sample of 135 member stars covering the entire radial extent of the system has been used to determine the metallicity distribution function of Terzan 5. The iron distribution clearly shows three peaks: a super-solar component at [Fe/H]


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

FIRST EVIDENCE OF FULLY SPATIALLY MIXED FIRST AND SECOND GENERATIONS IN GLOBULAR CLUSTERS: THE CASE OF NGC 6362*

E. Dalessandro; Davide Massari; M. Bellazzini; Paolo Miocchi; A. Mucciarelli; Maurizio Salaris; Santi Cassisi; F. R. Ferraro; B. Lanzoni

\simeq0.25


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The Origin of the Spurious Iron Spread in the Globular Cluster NGC 3201

A. Mucciarelli; E. Lapenna; Davide Massari; F. R. Ferraro; B. Lanzoni

dex, accounting for 29% of the sample, a dominant sub-solar population at [Fe/H]


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The Absolute Age of the Globular Cluster M15 Using Near-infrared Adaptive Optics Images from PISCES/LBT.

M. Monelli; Vincenzo Testa; G. Bono; I. Ferraro; G. Iannicola; G. Fiorentino; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Davide Massari; K. Boutsia; Runa Briguglio; Lorenzo Busoni; Roberta Carini; Laird M. Close; G. Cresci; Simone Esposito; Luca Fini; M. Fumana; Juan Carlos Guerra; John M. Hill; Craig Kulesa; F. Mannucci; Donald W. McCarthy; Enrico Pinna; Alfio Puglisi; Fernando Quiros-Pacheco; Roberto Ragazzoni; Armando Riccardi; A. Skemer; Marco Xompero

\simeq-0.30


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

NGC 6362: The Least Massive Globular Cluster with Chemically Distinct Multiple Populations

A. Mucciarelli; E. Dalessandro; Davide Massari; M. Bellazzini; F. R. Ferraro; B. Lanzoni; C. Lardo; Maurizio Salaris; Santi Cassisi

dex, corresponding to 62% of the total, and a minor (6%) metal-poor component at [Fe/H]


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

GeMS MCAO observations of the Galactic globular cluster NGC 2808: the absolute age

Davide Massari; G. Fiorentino; Alan W. McConnachie; G. Bono; M. Dall'Ora; I. Ferraro; G. Iannicola; Peter B. Stetson; Paolo Turri; Eline Tolstoy

\simeq-0.8


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Multiple stellar populations in the globular cluster M3 (NGC 5272): a Strömgren perspective

Davide Massari; Emilio Lapenna; A. Bragaglia; E. Dalessandro; Rodrigo Contreras Ramos; Pia Amigo

dex. Such a broad, multi-modal metallicity distribution demonstrates that Terzan 5 is not a genuine globular cluster but the remnant of a much more complex stellar system.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Chemical and kinematical properties of galactic bulge stars surrounding the stellar system Terzan 5

Davide Massari; A. Mucciarelli; F. R. Ferraro; L. Origlia; Robert Michael Rich; B. Lanzoni; E. Dalessandro; Rodrigo A. Ibata; L. Lovisi; M. Bellazzini; David B. Reitzel

We present the first evidence of multiple populations in the Galactic globular cluster NGC 6362. We used optical and near-UV Hubble Space Telescope and ground based photometry, finding that both the sub giant and red giant branches are split in two parallel sequences in all color magnitude diagrams where the F336W filter (or U band) is used. This cluster is one of the least massive globulars (M_tot~5x10^4 M_sun) where multiple populations have been detected so far. Even more interestingly and at odds with any previous finding, we observe that the two identified populations share the same radial distribution all over the cluster extension. NGC 6362 is the first system where stars from different populations are found to be completely spatially mixed. Based on N-body and hydrodynamical simulations of multiple stellar generations, we argue that, to reproduce these findings, NGC 6362 should have lost up to the 80% of its original mass


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

The power of teaming up HST and Gaia: the first proper motion measurement of the distant cluster NGC 2419

Davide Massari; Lorenzo Posti; Amina Helmi; G. Fiorentino; Eline Tolstoy

NGC 3201 is a globular cluster suspected to have an intrinsic spread in the iron content. We re-analysed a sample of 21 cluster stars observed with UVES-FLAMES at the Very Large Telescope and for which Simmerer et al. found a 0.4 dex wide [Fe/H] distribution with a metal-poor tail. We confirmed that when spectroscopic gravities are adopted, the derived [Fe/H] distribution spans ~0.4 dex. On the other hand, when photometric gravities are used, the metallicity distribution from Fe I lines remains large, while that derived from Fe II lines is narrow and compatible with no iron spread. We demonstrate that the metal-poor component claimed by Simmerer et al. is composed by asymptotic giant branch stars that could be affected by non local thermodynamical equilibrium effects driven by iron overionization. This leads to a decrease of the Fe I abundance, while leaving the Fe II abundance unaltered. A similar finding has been already found in asymptotic giant branch stars of the globular clusters M5 and 47 Tucanae. We conclude that NGC 3201 is a normal cluster, with no evidence of intrinsic iron spread.

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Paolo Turri

University of Victoria

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