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The Astronomical Journal | 2006

Spitzer survey of the large magellanic cloud: Surveying the agents of a Galaxy's evolution (SAGE). I. Overview and initial results

Margaret M. Meixner; Karl D. Gordon; Remy Indebetouw; Joseph L. Hora; Barbara A. Whitney; R. D. Blum; William T. Reach; Jean Philippe Bernard; Marilyn R. Meade; B. L. Babler; C. W. Engelbracht; B.-Q. For; Karl Anthony Misselt; Uma P. Vijh; Claus Leitherer; Martin Cohen; Ed B. Churchwell; F. Boulanger; Jay A. Frogel; Yasuo Fukui; J. S. Gallagher; Varoujan Gorjian; Jason Harris; Douglas M. Kelly; Akiko Kawamura; So Young Kim; William B. Latter; S. Madden; Ciska Markwick-Kemper; Akira Mizuno

We are performing a uniform and unbiased imaging survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC; ~7° × 7°) using the IRAC (3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8 μm) and MIPS (24, 70, and 160 μm) instruments on board the Spitzer Space Telescope in the Surveying the Agents of a Galaxys Evolution (SAGE) survey, these agents being the interstellar medium (ISM) and stars in the LMC. This paper provides an overview of the SAGE Legacy project, including observing strategy, data processing, and initial results. Three key science goals determined the coverage and depth of the survey. The detection of diffuse ISM with column densities >1.2 × 10^(21) H cm^(-2) permits detailed studies of dust processes in the ISM. SAGEs point-source sensitivity enables a complete census of newly formed stars with masses >3 M_☉ that will determine the current star formation rate in the LMC. SAGEs detection of evolved stars with mass-loss rates >1 × 10^(-8) M_☉ yr^(-1) will quantify the rate at which evolved stars inject mass into the ISM of the LMC. The observing strategy includes two epochs in 2005, separated by 3 months, that both mitigate instrumental artifacts and constrain source variability. The SAGE data are nonproprietary. The data processing includes IRAC and MIPS pipelines and a database for mining the point-source catalogs, which will be released to the community in support of Spitzer proposal cycles 4 and 5. We present initial results on the epoch 1 data for a region near N79 and N83. The MIPS 70 and 160 μm images of the diffuse dust emission of the N79/N83 region reveal a similar distribution to the gas emissions, especially the H I 21 cm emission. The measured point-source sensitivity for the epoch 1 data is consistent with expectations for the survey. The point-source counts are highest for the IRAC 3.6 μm band and decrease dramatically toward longer wavelengths, consistent with the fact that stars dominate the point-source catalogs and the dusty objects detected at the longer wavelengths are rare in comparison. The SAGE epoch 1 point-source catalog has ~4 × 10^6 sources, and more are anticipated when the epoch 1 and 2 data are combined. Using Milky Way (MW) templates as a guide, we adopt a simplified point-source classification to identify three candidate groups—stars without dust, dusty evolved stars, and young stellar objects—that offer a starting point for this work. We outline a strategy for identifying foreground MW stars, which may comprise as much as 18% of the source list, and background galaxies, which may comprise ~12% of the source list.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2009

The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury

Julianne J. Dalcanton; Benjamin F. Williams; Anil C. Seth; Andrew E. Dolphin; Jon A. Holtzman; Keith Rosema; Evan D. Skillman; Andrew A. Cole; Léo Girardi; Stephanie M. Gogarten; I. D. Karachentsev; Knut Olsen; Daniel R. Weisz; Charlotte R. Christensen; Kenneth C. Freeman; Karoline M. Gilbert; Carme Batlle i Gallart; Jason Harris; Paul W. Hodge; Roelof S. de Jong; V. E. Karachentseva; Mario Mateo; Peter B. Stetson; Maritza Tavarez; Dennis Zaritsky; Fabio Governato; Thomas P. Quinn

The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury (ANGST) is a systematic survey to establish a legacy of uniform multi-color photometry of resolved stars for a volume-limited sample of nearby galaxies (D 14 million stars. In this paper we present the details of the sample selection, imaging, data reduction, and the resulting photometric catalogs, along with an analysis of the photometric uncertainties (systematic and random), for both ACS and WFPC2 imaging. We also present uniformly derived relative distances measured from the apparent magnitude of the TRGB.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury IX. Constraining asymptotic giant branch evolution with old metal-poor galaxies

Léo Girardi; Benjamin F. Williams; Karoline M. Gilbert; Philip Rosenfield; Julianne J. Dalcanton; Paola Marigo; Martha L. Boyer; Andrew E. Dolphin; Daniel R. Weisz; J. Melbourne; Knut Olsen; Anil C. Seth; Evan D. Skillman

In an attempt to constrain evolutionary models of the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) phase at the limit of low masses and low metallicities, we have examined the luminosity functions and number ratios between AGB and red giant branch (RGB) stars from a sample of resolved galaxies from the ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury. This database provides Hubble Space Telescope optical photometry together with maps of completeness, photometric errors, and star formation histories for dozens of galaxies within 4 Mpc. We select 12 galaxies characterized by predominantly metal-poor populations as indicated by a very steep and blue RGB, and which do not present any indication of recent star formation in their color-magnitude diagrams. Thousands of AGB stars brighter than the tip of the RGB (TRGB) are present in the sample (between 60 and 400 per galaxy), hence, the Poisson noise has little impact in our measurements of the AGB/RGB ratio. We model the photometric data with a few sets of thermally pulsing AGB (TP-AGB) evolutionary models with different prescriptions for the mass loss. This technique allows us to set stringent constraints on the TP-AGB models of low-mass, metal-poor stars (with M < 1.5 M_⊙, [Fe/H] ≾ -1.0). Indeed, those which satisfactorily reproduce the observed AGB/RGB ratios have TP-AGB lifetimes between 1.2 and 1.8 Myr, and finish their nuclear burning lives with masses between 0.51 and 0.55 M_⊙. This is also in good agreement with recent observations of white dwarf masses in the M4 old globular cluster. These constraints can be added to those already derived from Magellanic Cloud star clusters as important mileposts in the arduous process of calibrating AGB evolutionary models.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2012

THE PANCHROMATIC HUBBLE ANDROMEDA TREASURY

Julianne J. Dalcanton; Benjamin F. Williams; Dustin Lang; Tod R. Lauer; Jason S. Kalirai; Anil C. Seth; Andrew E. Dolphin; Philip Rosenfield; Daniel R. Weisz; Eric F. Bell; Luciana Bianchi; Martha L. Boyer; Nelson Caldwell; Hui Dong; Claire E. Dorman; Karoline M. Gilbert; Léo Girardi; Stephanie M. Gogarten; Karl D. Gordon; Puragra Guhathakurta; Paul W. Hodge; Jon A. Holtzman; L. Clifton Johnson; Søren S. Larsen; Alexia R. Lewis; J. Melbourne; Knut Olsen; Hans-Walter Rix; Keith Rosema; Abhijit Saha

The Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury is an ongoing Hubble Space Telescope Multi-Cycle Treasury program to image ~1/3 of M31s star-forming disk in six filters, spanning from the ultraviolet (UV) to the near-infrared (NIR). We use the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) and Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) to resolve the galaxy into millions of individual stars with projected radii from 0 to 20 kpc. The full survey will cover a contiguous 0.5 deg^(2)area in 828 orbits. Imaging is being obtained in the F275W and F336W filters on the WFC3/UVIS camera, F475W and F814W on ACS/WFC, and F110W and F160W on WFC3/IR. The resulting wavelength coverage gives excellent constraints on stellar temperature, bolometric luminosity, and extinction for most spectral types. The data produce photometry with a signal-to-noise ratio of 4 at m F_(275W) = 25.1, m_(F336W) = 24.9, m_(F475W) = 27.9, m_(F814W) = 27.1, m_(F110W) = 25.5, and m_(F160W) = 24.6 for single pointings in the uncrowded outer disk; in the inner disk, however, the optical and NIR data are crowding limited, and the deepest reliable magnitudes are up to 5 mag brighter. Observations are carried out in two orbits per pointing, split between WFC3/UVIS and WFC3/IR cameras in primary mode, with ACS/WFC run in parallel. All pointings are dithered to produce Nyquist-sampled images in F475W, F814W, and F160W. We describe the observing strategy, photometry, astrometry, and data products available for the survey, along with extensive testing of photometric stability, crowding errors, spatially dependent photometric biases, and telescope pointing control. We also report on initial fits to the structure of M31s disk, derived from the density of red giant branch stars, in a way that is independent of assumed mass-to-light ratios and is robust to variations in dust extinction. These fits also show that the 10 kpc ring is not just a region of enhanced recent star formation, but is instead a dynamical structure containing a significant overdensity of stars with ages >1 Gyr.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

The NGC 404 Nucleus: Star Cluster and Possible Intermediate-mass Black Hole

Anil C. Seth; Michele Cappellari; Nadine Neumayer; Nelson Caldwell; N. Bastian; Knut Olsen; R. D. Blum; Victor P. Debattista; Richard M. McDermid; Thomas H. Puzia; Andrew W. Stephens

We examine the nuclear morphology, kinematics, and stellar populations in nearby S0 galaxy NGC 404 using a combination of adaptive optics assisted near-IR integral-field spectroscopy, optical spectroscopy, and Hubble Space Telescope imaging. These observations enable study of the NGC 404 nucleus at a level of detail possible only in the nearest galaxies. The surface brightness profile suggests the presence of three components: a bulge, a nuclear star cluster (NSC), and a central light excess within the cluster at radii < 3 pc. These components have distinct kinematics with modest rotation seen in the NSC and counter-rotation seen in the central excess. Molecular hydrogen emission traces a disk with rotation nearly orthogonal to that of the stars. The stellar populations of the three components are also distinct, with half of the mass of the NSC having ages of ~1 Gyr (perhaps resulting from a galaxy merger), while the bulge is dominated by much older stars. Dynamical modeling of the stellar kinematics gives a total NSC mass of 1.1 × 107 M ☉. Dynamical detection of a possible intermediate-mass black hole (BH) is hindered by uncertainties in the central stellar mass profile. Assuming a constant mass-to-light ratio, the stellar dynamical modeling suggests a BH mass of <1 × 105 M ☉, while the molecular hydrogen gas kinematics are best fitted by a BH with a mass of 4.5+3.5 –2.0 × 105 M ☉. Unresolved and possibly variable dust emission in the near-infrared and active galactic nucleus-like molecular hydrogen emission-line ratios do suggest the presence of an accreting BH in this nearby LINER galaxy.


The Astronomical Journal | 2008

Spitzer survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud, Surveying the Agents of a Galaxy's Evolution (SAGE) IV: dust properties in the interstellar medium

Jean Philippe Bernard; William T. Reach; D. Paradis; Margaret M. Meixner; R. Paladini; Akiko Kawamura; Toshikazu Onishi; Uma P. Vijh; Karl D. Gordon; Remy Indebetouw; Joseph L. Hora; Barbara A. Whitney; R. D. Blum; Marilyn R. Meade; B. L. Babler; Ed Churchwell; C. W. Engelbracht; B.-Q. For; Karl Anthony Misselt; Claus Leitherer; Martin Cohen; F. Boulanger; Jay A. Frogel; Yasuo Fukui; J. S. Gallagher; Varoujan Gorjian; Jason Harris; Douglas M. Kelly; William B. Latter; S. Madden

The goal of this paper is to present the results of a preliminary analysis of the extended infrared (IR) emission by dust in the interstellar medium (ISM) of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We combine Spitzer Surveying the Agents of Galaxy Evolution (SAGE) and Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) data and correlate the infrared emission with gas tracers of H I, CO, and Hα. We present a global analysis of the infrared emission as well as detailed modeling of the spectral energy distribution (SED) of a few selected regions. Extended emission by dust associated with the neutral, molecular, and diffuse ionized phases of the ISM is detected at all IR bands from 3.6 μm to 160 μm. The relative abundance of the various dust species appears quite similar to that in the Milky Way (MW) in all the regions we have modeled. We construct maps of the temperature of large dust grains. The temperature map shows variations in the range 12.1-34.7 K, with a systematic gradient from the inner to outer regions, tracing the general distribution of massive stars and individual H II regions as well as showing warmer dust in the stellar bar. This map is used to derive the far-infrared (FIR) optical depth of large dust grains. We find two main departures in the LMC with respect to expectations based on the MW: (1) excess mid-infrared (MIR) emission near 70 μm, referred to as the 70 μm excess, and (2) departures from linear correlation between the FIR optical depth and the gas column density, which we refer to as FIR excess emission. The 70 μm excess increases gradually from the MW to the LMC to the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), suggesting evolution with decreasing metallicity. The excess is associated with the neutral and diffuse ionized gas, with the strongest excess region located in a loop structure next to 30 Dor. We show that the 70 μm excess can be explained by a modification of the size distribution of very small grains with respect to that in the MW, and a corresponding mass increase of ≃13% of the total dust mass in selected regions. The most likely explanation is that the 70 μm excess is due to the production of large very small grains (VSG) through erosion of larger grains in the diffuse medium. This FIR excess could be due to intrinsic variations of the dust/gas ratio, which would then vary from 4.6 to 2.3 times lower than the MW values across the LMC, but X_(CO) values derived from the IR emission would then be about three times lower than those derived from the Virial analysis of the CO data. We also investigate the possibility that the FIR excess is associated with an additional gas component undetected in the available gas tracers. Assuming a constant dust abundance in all ISM phases, the additional gas component would have twice the known H I mass. We show that it is plausible that the FIR excess is due to cold atomic gas that is optically thick in the 21 cm line, while the contribution by a pure H_2 phase with no CO emission remains a possible explanation.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2008

Revised bolometric corrections and interstellar extinction coefficients for the ACS and WFPC2 photometric systems

Léo Girardi; Julianne J. Dalcanton; Benjamin F. Williams; Roelof S. de Jong; Carme Batlle i Gallart; M. Monelli; M. A. T. Groenewegen; Jon A. Holtzman; Knut Olsen; Anil C. Seth; Daniel R. Weisz

We present extensive tables of bolometric corrections and interstellar extinction coefficients for the WFPC2 and ACS (both WFC and HRC) photometric systems. They are derived from synthetic photometry applied to a database of spectral energy distributions covering a large range of effective temperatures, surface gravity, and metal content. Carbon stars are also considered. The zero points take into consideration the new high-accuracy Vega fluxes from Bohlin. These tables are employed to transform Padova isochrones into WFPC2 and ACS photometric systems using interstellar extinction coefficients on a star-to-star basis. All data are available either in tabular form or via an interactive web interface in the case of the isochrones. Preliminary tables for the WFC3 camera are also included in the database.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

Really cool stars and the star formation history at the Galactic Center

R. D. Blum; Solange V. Ramirez; K. Sellgren; Knut Olsen

We present ?/?? = 550-1200 near-infrared H and K spectra for a magnitude-limited sample of 79 asymptotic giant branch and cool supergiant stars in the central ?5 pc (diameter) of the Galaxy. We use a set of similar spectra obtained for solar neighborhood stars with known Teff and Mbol that is in the same range as the Galactic center (GC) sample to derive Teff and Mbol for the GC sample. We then construct the H-R diagram for the GC sample. Using an automated maximum likelihood routine, we derive a coarse star formation history of the GC. We find that (1) roughly 75% of the stars formed in the central few parsecs are older than 5 Gyr; (2) the star formation rate (SFR) is variable over time, with a roughly 4 times higher SFR in the last 100 Myr compared to the average SFR; (3) our model can match dynamical limits on the total mass of stars formed only by limiting the initial mass function to masses above 0.7 M? (this could be a signature of mass segregation or of the bias toward massive star formation from the unique star formation conditions in the GC); (4) blue supergiants account for 12% of the total sample observed, and the ratio of red to blue supergiants is roughly 1.5; and (5) models with isochrones with [Fe/H] = 0.0 over all ages fit the stars in our H-R diagram better than models with lower [Fe/H] in the oldest age bins, consistent with the finding of Ram?rez et al. that stars with ages between 10 Myr and 1 Gyr have solar [Fe/H].


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

The advanced camera for surveys nearby galaxy survey treasury. V. Radial star formation history of NGC 300

Stephanie M. Gogarten; Julianne J. Dalcanton; Benjamin F. Williams; Rok Roskar; Jon A. Holtzman; Anil C. Seth; Andrew E. Dolphin; Daniel R. Weisz; Andrew A. Cole; Victor P. Debattista; Karoline M. Gilbert; Knut Olsen; Evan D. Skillman; Roelof S. de Jong; I. D. Karachentsev; Thomas R. Quinn

We present new Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations of NGC 300 taken as part of the Advanced Camera for Surveys Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury (ANGST). Individual stars are resolved in these images down to an absolute magnitude of M F814W = 1.0 (below the red clump). We determine the star formation history of the galaxy in six radial bins by comparing our observed color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) with synthetic CMDs based on theoretical isochrones. We find that the stellar disk out to 5.4 kpc is primarily old, in contrast with the outwardly similar galaxy M33. We determine the scale length as a function of age and find evidence for inside-out growth of the stellar disk: the scale length has increased from 1.1 ± 0.1 kpc 10 Gyr ago to 1.3 ± 0.1 kpc at present, indicating a buildup in the fraction of young stars at larger radii. As the scale length of M33 has recently been shown to have increased much more dramatically with time, our results demonstrate that two galaxies with similar sizes and morphologies can have very different histories. With an N-body simulation of a galaxy designed to be similar to NGC 300, we determine that the effects of radial migration should be minimal. We trace the metallicity gradient as a function of time and find a present-day metallicity gradient consistent with that seen in previous studies. Consistent results are obtained from archival images covering the same radial extent but differing in placement and filter combination.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

HYDRA II: A FAINT AND COMPACT MILKY WAY DWARF GALAXY FOUND IN THE SURVEY OF THE MAGELLANIC STELLAR HISTORY

Nicolas F. Martin; David L. Nidever; Gurtina Besla; Knut Olsen; Alistair R. Walker; A. Katherina Vivas; Robert A. Gruendl; Catherine C. Kaleida; Ricardo R. Munoz; R. D. Blum; Abhijit Saha; Blair C. Conn; Eric F. Bell; You-Hua Chu; M.-R. L. Cioni; Thomas J. L. de Boer; Carme Gallart; Shoko Jin; Andrea Kunder; Steven R. Majewski; David Martinez-Delgado; Antonela Monachesi; M. Monelli; Lara Monteagudo; Noelia E. D. Noel; Edward W. Olszewski; Guy S. Stringfellow; Roeland P. van der Marel; Dennis Zaritsky

© 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.We present the discovery of a new dwarf galaxy, Hydra II, found serendipitously within the data from the ongoing Survey of the Magellanic Stellar History conducted with the Dark Energy Camera on the Blanco 4 m Telescope. The new satellite is compact (r h = 68 ± 11 pc) and faint (M V = -4.8 ± 0.3), but well within the realm of dwarf galaxies. The stellar distribution of Hydra II in the color-magnitude diagram is well-described by a metal-poor ([Fe/H] = -2.2) and old (13 Gyr) isochrone and shows a distinct blue horizontal branch, some possible red clump stars, and faint stars that are suggestive of blue stragglers. At a heliocentric distance of 134 ± 10 kpc, Hydra II is located in a region of the Galactic halo that models have suggested may host material from the leading arm of the Magellanic Stream. A comparison with N-body simulations hints that the new dwarf galaxy could be or could have been a satellite of the Magellanic Clouds.

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R. D. Blum

National Science Foundation

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Abhijit Saha

Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy

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Alistair R. Walker

Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy

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Karl D. Gordon

Space Telescope Science Institute

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