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Dive into the research topics where Robert W. O’Connell is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert W. O’Connell.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

CHEMICAL CARTOGRAPHY WITH APOGEE: METALLICITY DISTRIBUTION FUNCTIONS AND THE CHEMICAL STRUCTURE OF THE MILKY WAY DISK

Michael R. Hayden; Jo Bovy; Jon A. Holtzman; David L. Nidever; Jonathan C. Bird; David H. Weinberg; Brett H. Andrews; Steven R. Majewski; Carlos Allende Prieto; Friedrich Anders; Timothy C. Beers; Dmitry Bizyaev; Cristina Chiappini; Katia Cunha; Peter M. Frinchaboy; D. A. García-Hernández; Ana G. Pérez; Léo Girardi; Paul Harding; Frederick R. Hearty; Jennifer A. Johnson; Szabolcs Mészáros; Ivan Minchev; Robert W. O’Connell; Kaike Pan; A. C. Robin; Ricardo P. Schiavon; Donald P. Schneider; Mathias Schultheis; Matthew Shetrone

Using a sample of 69,919 red giants from the SDSS-III/APOGEE Data Release 12, we measure the distribution of stars in the [/Fe] versus [Fe/H] plane and the metallicity distribution functions (MDFs) across an unprecedented volume of the Milky Way disk, with radius 3 < R < 15 kpc and height kpc. Stars in the inner disk (R < 5 kpc) lie along a single track in [/Fe] versus [Fe/H], starting with -enhanced, metal-poor stars and ending at [/Fe] ∼ 0 and [Fe/H] ∼ +0.4. At larger radii we find two distinct sequences in [/Fe] versus [Fe/H] space, with a roughly solar- sequence that spans a decade in metallicity and a high- sequence that merges with the low- sequence at super-solar [Fe/H]. The location of the high- sequence is nearly constant across the disk.


The Astronomical Journal | 2015

ABUNDANCES, STELLAR PARAMETERS, AND SPECTRA FROM THE SDSS-III/APOGEE SURVEY

Jon A. Holtzman; Matthew Shetrone; Jennifer A. Johnson; Carlos Allende Prieto; Friedrich Anders; Brett H. Andrews; Timothy C. Beers; Dmitry Bizyaev; Michael R. Blanton; Jo Bovy; R. Carrera; S. Drew Chojnowski; Katia Cunha; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Diane Feuillet; Peter M. Frinchaboy; Jessica Galbraith-Frew; Ana G. Pérez; D. A. García-Hernández; Sten Hasselquist; Michael R. Hayden; Frederick R. Hearty; Inese I. Ivans; Steven R. Majewski; Sarah L. Martell; Szabolcs Mészáros; Demitri Muna; David L. Nidever; Duy Cuong Nguyen; Robert W. O’Connell

The SDSS-III/Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) survey operated from 2011–2014 using the APOGEE spectrograph, which collects high-resolution (R ~ 22,500), near-IR (1.51–1.70 µm) spectra with a multiplexing (300 fiber-fed objects) capability. We describe the survey data products that are publicly available, which include catalogs with radial velocity, stellar parameters, and 15 elemental abundances for over 150,000 stars, as well as the more than 500,000 spectra from which these quantities are derived. Calibration relations for the stellar parameters (Teff , log g, [M/H], [a/M]) and abundances (C, N, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, S, K, Ca, Ti, V, Mn, Fe, Ni) are presented and discussed. The internal scatter of the abundances within clusters indicates that abundance precision is generally between 0.05 and 0.09 dex across a broad temperature range; it is smaller for some elemental abundances within more limited ranges and at high signal-to-noise ratio. We assess the accuracy of the abundances using comparison of mean cluster metallicities with literature values, APOGEE observations of the solar spectrum and of Arcturus, comparison of individual star abundances with other measurements, and consideration of the locus of derived parameters and abundances of the entire sample, and find that it is challenging to determine the absolute abundance scale; external accuracy may be good to 0.1–0.2 dex. Uncertainties may be larger at cooler temperatures (Teff < 4000 K). Access to the public data release and data products is described, and some guidance for using the data products is provided.


The Astronomical Journal | 2001

The Fossil Starburst in M82

Richard de Grijs; Robert W. O’Connell; John S. Gallagher

We present high-resolution optical and near-infrared HST observations of two adjacent regions in the fossil starburst region inM82, M82 B1 and B2. The presence of both the active and the fossil starburst in M82 provides a unique physical environment to study the stellar and dynamical evolution of star cluster systems. The cluster population in B2 is more heavily affected by internal extinction than that in B1, amounting to an excess extinction in B2 of AV,excess≃1.1±0.3 mag. Preliminary age estimates date the cluster population in the fossil starburst between ∼2× 108 and ∼ 109 years. The radial luminosity profiles of the brightest clusters are more closely approximated by power laws than by a Gaussian model, in particular in their wings, which favours a slow star formation scenario.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Chemodynamics of the Milky Way - I. The first year of APOGEE data

Friedrich Anders; C. Chiappini; B. Santiago; Helio J. Rocha-Pinto; Léo Girardi; L. N. da Costa; M. A. G. Maia; M. Steinmetz; Ivan Minchev; Mathias Schultheis; C. Boeche; A. Miglio; Josefina Montalbán; Donald P. Schneider; Timothy C. Beers; Katia Cunha; C. Allende Prieto; E. Balbinot; Dmitry Bizyaev; D. E. Brauer; J. Brinkmann; Peter M. Frinchaboy; A. E. García Pérez; Michael R. Hayden; Frederick R. Hearty; J. Holtzman; Jennifer A. Johnson; Karen Kinemuchi; S. R. Majewski; Elena Malanushenko

We investigate the chemo-kinematic properties of the Milky Way disc by exploring the first year of data from the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE), and compare our results to smaller optical high-resolution samples in the literature, as well as results from lower resolution surveys such as GCS, SEGUE and RAVE. We start by selecting a high-quality sample in terms of chemistry (


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

ASPCAP: THE APOGEE STELLAR PARAMETER AND CHEMICAL ABUNDANCES PIPELINE

Ana G. Pérez; Carlos Allende Prieto; Jon A. Holtzman; Matthew Shetrone; Szabolcs Mészáros; Dmitry Bizyaev; R. Carrera; Katia Cunha; D. A. García-Hernández; Jennifer A. Johnson; Steven R. Majewski; David L. Nidever; Ricardo P. Schiavon; Neville Shane; Verne V. Smith; Jennifer Sobeck; Nicholas W. Troup; Olga Zamora; David H. Weinberg; Jo Bovy; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Diane Feuillet; Peter M. Frinchaboy; Michael R. Hayden; Frederick R. Hearty; Duy Cuong Nguyen; Robert W. O’Connell; Marc H. Pinsonneault; John C. Wilson; Gail Zasowski

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The Astronomical Journal | 2000

The Star Clusters in the Starburst Irregular Galaxy NGC 1569

Deidre A. Hunter; Robert W. O’Connell; J. Gallagher; Tammy A. Smecker-Hane

20.000 stars) and, after computing distances and orbital parameters for this sample, we employ a number of useful subsets to formulate constraints on Galactic chemical and chemodynamical evolution processes in the Solar neighbourhood and beyond (e.g., metallicity distributions -- MDFs, [


The Astronomical Journal | 2017

The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE)

Steven R. Majewski; Ricardo P. Schiavon; Peter M. Frinchaboy; Carlos Allende Prieto; Robert H. Barkhouser; Dmitry Bizyaev; Basil Blank; Sophia Brunner; Adam Burton; R. Carrera; S. Drew Chojnowski; Katia Cunha; Courtney R. Epstein; Greg Fitzgerald; Ana G. Pérez; Frederick R. Hearty; C. Henderson; Jon A. Holtzman; Jennifer A. Johnson; Charles R. Lam; James E. Lawler; Paul Maseman; Szabolcs Mészáros; Matthew J. Nelson; Duy Coung Nguyen; David L. Nidever; Marc H. Pinsonneault; Matthew Shetrone; Stephen A. Smee; Verne V. Smith

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS, IONIZED GAS, AND MOLECULAR HYDROGEN IN BRIGHTEST CLUSTER GALAXIES OF COOL-CORE CLUSTERS OF GALAXIES

Megan Donahue; Genevieve E. de Messieres; Robert W. O’Connell; G. Mark Voit; Aaron S. Hoffer; Brian R. McNamara; Paul E. J. Nulsen

/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] diagrams, and abundance gradients). Our red giant sample spans distances as large as 10 kpc from the Sun. We find remarkable agreement between the recently published local (d


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2002

A Hubble Space Telescope Survey of the Mid-Ultraviolet Morphology of Nearby Galaxies*

Rogier A. Windhorst; Violet A. Taylor; Rolf Arthur Jansen; Stephen C. Odewahn; Claudia Chiarenza; Christopher J. Conselice; Richard de Grijs; Roelof S. de Jong; John W. MacKenty; Paul B. Eskridge; Jay A. Frogel; John S. Gallagher; John Eugene Hibbard; Lynn Diane Matthews; Robert W. O’Connell

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Star Formation Triggering Mechanisms in Dwarf Galaxies: The Far-Ultraviolet, Hα, and H I Morphology of Holmberg II

Susan G. Stewart; Michael Nicholas Fanelli; Gene G. Byrd; Jesse K. Hill; David J. Westpfahl; Kwang-Ping Cheng; Robert W. O’Connell; Morton S. Roberts; Susan G. Neff; Andrew M. Smith; Theodore P. Stecher

100 pc) high-resolution high-S/N HARPS sample and our local HQ sample (d

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Ralph C. Bohlin

Space Telescope Science Institute

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Andrew M. Smith

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Morton S. Roberts

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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Susan G. Neff

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Jay A. Frogel

Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy

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Seth H. Cohen

Arizona State University

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Bradley C. Whitmore

Space Telescope Science Institute

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