Sara Lucatello
INAF
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sara Lucatello.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009
Eugenio Carretta; A. Bragaglia; R. Gratton; Sara Lucatello; G. Catanzaro; F. Leone; M. Bellazzini; R. U. Claudi; V. D'Orazi; Y. Momany; S. Ortolani; E. Pancino; G. Piotto; A. Recio-Blanco; Elena Sabbi
We present abundances of Fe, Na, and O for 1409 red giant stars in 15 galactic globular clusters (GCs), derived from the homogeneous analysis of high-resolution FLAMES/GIRAFFE spectra. Combining the present data with results from our FLAMES/UVES spectra and from previous studies within the project, we obtained a total sample of 1958 stars in 19 clusters, the largest and most homogeneous database of this kind to date. The programme clusters cover a range in metallicity from [Fe/H] = −2. 4d ex to [Fe/H] = −0.4 dex, with a wide variety of global parameters (morphology of the horizontal branch, mass, concentration, etc.). For all clusters we find the Na-O anticorrelation, the classical signature of the operation of proton-capture reactions in H-burning at high temperature in a previous generation of more massive stars that are now extinct. Using quantitative criteria (from the morphology and extension of the Na-O anticorrelation), we can define three different components of the stellar population in GCs. We separate a primordial component (P) of first-generation stars, and two components of second-generation stars, that we name intermediate (I) and extreme (E) populations from their different chemical composition. The P component is present in all clusters, and its fraction is almost constant at about one third. The I component represents the bulk of the cluster population. On the other hand, E component is not present in all clusters, and it is more conspicuous in some (but not in all) of the most massive clusters. We discuss the fractions and spatial distributions of these components in our sample and in two additional clusters (M 3 = NGC 5272 and M 13 = NGC6205) with large sets of stars analysed in the literature. We also find that the slope of the anti-correlation (defined by the minimum O and maximum Na abundances) changes from cluster-to-cluster, a change that is represented well by a bilinear relation on cluster metallicity and luminosity. This second dependence suggests a correlation between average mass of polluters and cluster mass.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2005
Giampaolo Piotto; Sandro Villanova; L. R. Bedin; R. Gratton; Santi Cassisi; Yazan Momany; Alejandra Recio-Blanco; Sara Lucatello; Jay Anderson; Ivan R. King; A. Pietrinferni; Giovanni Carraro
Having shown in a recent paper that the main sequence of ? Centauri is split into two distinct branches, we now present spectroscopic results showing that the bluer sequence is less metal-poor. We have carefully combined VLTs GIRAFFE spectra of 17 stars on each side of the split into a single spectrum for each branch, with adequate signal-to-noise ratio, to show clearly that the stars of the blue main sequence are less metal-poor by 0.3 dex than those of the dominant red one. From an analysis of the individual spectra, we could not detect any abundance spread among the blue main-sequence stars, whereas the red main-sequence stars show a 0.2 dex spread in metallicity. We use stellar structure models to show that only greatly enhanced helium can explain the color difference between the two main sequences, and we discuss ways in which this enhancement could have arisen.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001
R. Gratton; P. Bonifacio; A. Bragaglia; Eugenio Carretta; V. Castellani; Miriam Centurion; A. Chieffi; Riccardo U. Claudi; G. Clementini; F. D'Antona; S. Desidera; Patrick Francois; F. Grundahl; Sara Lucatello; Paolo Molaro; Luca Pasquini; Christopher Sneden; F. Spite; Oscar Straniero
High dispersion spectra (R > 40 000) for a quite large number of stars at the main sequence turn-o and at the base of the giant branch in NGC 6397 and NGC 6752 were obtained with the UVES on Kueyen (VLT UT2). The (Fe/H) values we found are 2:03 0:02 0:04 and 1:42 0:02 0:04 for NGC 6397 and NGC 6752 respectively, where the rst error bars refer to internal and the second ones to systematic errors (within the abundance scale dened by our analysis of 25 subdwarfs with good Hipparcos parallaxes). In both clusters the (Fe/H)s obtained for TO-stars agree perfectly (within a few percent) with that obtained for stars at the base of the RGB. The (O=Fe) = 0:21 0:05 value we obtain for NGC 6397 is quite low, but it agrees with previous results obtained for giants in this cluster. Moreover, the star-to-star scatter in both O and Fe is very small, indicating that this small mass cluster is chemically very homogenous. On the other hand, our results show clearly and for the rst time that the O-Na anticorrelation (up to now seen only for stars on the red giant branches of globular clusters) is present among unevolved stars in the globular cluster NGC 6752, a more massive cluster than NGC 6397. A similar anticorrelation is present also for Mg and Al, and C and N. It is very dicult to explain the observed Na-O, and Mg-Al anticorrelation in NGC 6752 stars by a deep mixing scenario; we think it requires some non internal mechanism.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009
Eugenio Carretta; A. Bragaglia; R. Gratton; V. D'Orazi; Sara Lucatello
We have collected spectra of about 2000 red giant branch (RGB) stars in 19 Galactic globular clusters (GC) using FLAMES@VLT (about 100 stars with GIRAFFE and about 10 with UVES, respectively, in each GC). These observations provide an unprecedented, precise, and homogeneous data-set of Fe abundances in GCs. We use it to study the cosmic scatter of iron and find that, as far as Fe is concerned, most GCs can still be considered mono-metallic, since the upper limit to the scatter of iron is less than 0.05 dex, meaning that the degree of homogeneity is better than 12%. The scatter in Fe we find seems to have a dependence on luminosity, possibly due to the well-known inadequacies of stellar atmospheres for upper-RGB stars and/or to intrinsic variability. It also seems to be correlated with cluster properties, like the mass, indicating a larger scatter in more massive GCs which is likely a (small) true intrinsic scatter. The 19 GCs, covering the metallicity range of the bulk of Galactic GCs, define an accurate and updated metallicity scale. We provide transformation equations for a few existing scales. We also provide new values of [Fe/H], on our scale, for all GCs in the Harris catalogue.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009
Eugenio Carretta; A. Bragaglia; R. Gratton; Sara Lucatello
We present homogeneous abundance determinations for iron and some of the elements involved in the proton-capture reactions (O, Na, Mg, Al, and Si) for 202 red giants in 17 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) from the analysis of high-resolution UVES spectra obtained with the FLAMES facility at the ESO VLT2 telescope. Our programme clusters span almost the whole range of the metallicity distribution of GCs and were selected to sample the widest range of global parameters (horizontal-branch morphology, masses, concentration, etc.). In this paper we focus on the discussion of the Na-O and Mg-Al anticorrelations and related issues. Our study finds clear Na and O star-to-star abundance variations, exceeding those expected from the error in the analysis, in all clusters. Variations in Al are present in all but a few GCs. Finally, a spread in abundances of Mg and Si are also present in a few clusters. Mg is slightly less overabundant and Si slightly more overabundant in the most Al-rich stars. The correlation between Si and Al abundances is a signature of production of 28 Si leaking from the Mg-Al cycle in a few clusters. The cross sections required for the proper reactions to take over in the cycle point to temperatures in excess of about 65 million K for the favoured site of production. We used a dilution model to infer the total range of Al abundances starting from the Na and Al abundances in the FLAMES-UVES spectra, and the Na abundance distributions found from analysis of the much larger set of stars for which FLAMES-GIRAFFE spectra were available. We found that the maximum amount of additional Al produced by first-generation polluters contributing to the composition of the second-generation stars in each cluster is closely correlated with the same combination of metallicity and cluster luminosity that reproduced the minimum O-abundances found from GIRAFFE spectra. We then suggest that the high temperatures required for the Mg-Al cycle are only reached in the most massive and most metal-poor polluters.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
Eugenio Carretta; A. Bragaglia; R. Gratton; A. Recio-Blanco; Sara Lucatello; V. D'Orazi; Santi Cassisi
We revise the scenario of the formation of Galactic globular clusters (GCs) by adding the observed detailed chemical composition of their different stellar generations to the set of their global parameters. We exploit the unprecedented set of homogeneous abundances of more than 1200 red giants in 19 clusters, as well as additional data from literature, to give a new definition of bona fide GCs, as the stellar aggregates showing the Na-O anticorrelation. We propose a classification of GCs according to their kinematics and location in the Galaxy in three populations: disk/bulge, inner halo, and outer halo. We find that the luminosity function of GCs is fairly independent of their population, suggesting that it is imprinted by the formation mechanism only marginally affected by the ensuing evolution. We show that a large fraction of the primordial population should have been lost by the proto-GCs. The extremely low Al abundances found for the primordial population of massive GCs indicate a very fast enrichment process before the formation of the primordial population. We suggest a scenario for the formation of GCs that includes at least three main phases: i) the formation of a precursor population (likely due to the interaction of cosmological structures similar to those that led to the formation of dwarf spheroidals, but residing at smaller Galactocentric distances, with the early Galaxy or with other structures); ii) the triggering of a long episode of star formation (the primordial population) from the precursor population; and iii) the formation of the current GC, mainly within a cooling flow formed by the slow winds of a fraction of the primordial population. The precursor population is very effective in raising the metal content in massive and/or metal-poor (mainly halo) clusters, while its role is minor in small and/or metal-rich (mainly disk) ones. Finally, we use principal component analysis and multivariate relations to study the phase of metal enrichment from first to second generation. We conclude that most of the chemical signatures of GCs may be ascribed to a few parameters, the most important being metallicity, mass, and cluster age. Location within the Galaxy (as described by the kinematics) also plays some role, while additional parameters are required to describe their dynamical status.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003
R. Gratton; A. Bragaglia; Eugenio Carretta; G. Clementini; S. Desidera; F. Grundahl; Sara Lucatello
New improved distances and absolute ages for the Galactic globular clusters NGC 6397, NGC 6752, and 47 Tuc are obtained using the Main Sequence Fitting Method. We derived accurate estimates of reddening and metal abundance for these three clusters using a strictly dierential procedure, where the Johnson B V and Stromgren b y colours and UVES high resolution spectra of turn-o stars and early subgiants belonging to the clusters were compared to similar data for field subdwarfs with accurate parallaxes measured by Hipparcos. The use of a reddening free temperature indicator (the profile of H) allowed us to reduce the error bars in reddening determinations to about 0.005 mag, and in metal abundances to 0.04 dex, in the scales defined by the local subdwarfs. Error bars in distances are then reduced to about 0.07 mag for each cluster, yielding ages with typical random errors of about 1 Gyr. We find that NGC 6397 and NGC 6752 have ages of 13:9 1:1 and 13:8 1: 1G yr respectively, when standard isochrones without microscopic diusion are used, while 47 Tuc is probably about 2.6 Gyr younger, in agreement with results obtained by other techniques sensitive to relative ages. If we use models that include the eects of sedimentation due to microscopic diusion in agreement with our observations of NGC 6397, and take into account various sources of possible systematic errors with a statistical approach, we conclude that the age of the oldest globular clusters in the Galaxy is 13:4 0:8 0:6 Gyr, where the first error bar accounts for random eects, and the second one for systematic errors. This age estimate is fully compatible with the very recent results from WMAP, and indicates that the oldest Galactic globular clusters formed within the first 1.7 Gyr after the Big Bang, corresponding to a redshift of z 2:5, in a standardCDM model. The epoch of formation of the (inner halo) globular clusters lasted about 2.6 Gyr, ending at a time corresponding to a redshift of z 1:3. On the other hand, our new age estimate once combined with values of H0 given by WMAP and by the HST Key Project, provides a robust upper limit at 95% level of confidence of M < 0:57, independently of type Ia SNe, and strongly supports the need for a dark energy. The new cluster distances lead to new estimates of the horizontal branch luminosity, that may be used to derive the zero point of the relation between the horizontal branch absolute magnitude and metallicity: we obtain MV (HB)= (0:22 0:05)((Fe=H)+ 1:5)+ (0:56 0:07). This zero point is 0.03 mag shorter than obtained by Carretta et al. (2000) and within the error bar it agrees with, but it is more precise than most of the previous individual determinations of the RR Lyrae absolute magnitude. When combined with the apparent average luminosity of the RR Lyrae stars in the LMC by Clementini et al. (2003), this zero point provides a new estimate of the distance modulus to the LMC: (m M)0= 18:50 0:09.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
Thomas Bensby; J. C. Yee; Sofia Feltzing; Jennifer A. Johnson; A. Gould; Judith G. Cohen; Martin Asplund; Jorge Melendez; Sara Lucatello; C. Han; Ian B. Thompson; Avishay Gal-Yam; A. Udalski; D. P. Bennett; I. A. Bond; W. Kohei; T. Sumi; D. Suzuki; K. Suzuki; S. Takino; P. J. Tristram; N. Yamai; A. Yonehara
Based on high-resolution spectra obtained during gravitational microlensing events we present a detailed elemental abundance analysis of 32 dwarf and subgiant stars in the Galactic bulge. Combined with the sample of 26 stars from the previous papers in this series, we now have 58 microlensed bulge dwarfs and subgiants that have been homogeneously analysed. The main characteristics of the sample and the findings that can be drawn are: (i) the metallicity distribution (MDF) is wide and spans all metallicities between [Fe/H] = −1.9 to +0.6; (ii) the dip in the MDF around solar metallicity that was apparent in our previous analysis of a smaller sample (26 microlensed stars) is no longer evident; instead it has a complex structure and indications of multiple components are starting to emerge. A tentative interpretation is that there could be different stellar populations at interplay, each with a different scale height: the thin disk, the thick disk, and a bar population; (iii) the stars with [Fe/H] ≲ −0.1 are old with ages between 10 and 12 Gyr; (iv) the metal-rich stars with [Fe/H] ≳ −0.1 show a wide variety of ages, ranging from 2 to 12 Gyr with a distribution that has a dominant peak around 4−5 Gyr and a tail towards higher ages; (v) there are indications in the [α/Fe]−[Fe/H] abundance trends that the “knee” occurs around [Fe/H] = −0.3 to −0.2, which is a slightly higher metallicity as compared to the “knee” for the local thick disk. This suggests that the chemical enrichment of the metal-poor bulge has been somewhat faster than what is observed for the local thick disk. The results from the microlensed bulge dwarf stars in combination with other findings in the literature, in particular the evidence that the bulge has cylindrical rotation, indicate that the Milky Way could be an almost pure disk galaxy. The bulge would then just be a conglomerate of the other Galactic stellar populations (thin disk, thick disk, halo, and ...?), residing together in the central parts of the Galaxy, influenced by the Galactic bar.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2008
David K. Lai; Michael Bolte; Jennifer A. Johnson; Sara Lucatello; Alexander Heger; S. E. Woosley
We present the results of an abundance analysis for a sample of stars with � 4 < ½Fe/H� < � 2. The data were obtained with the HIRES spectrograph at Keck Observatory. The set includes 28 stars, with effective temperature ranging from 4800 to 6600 K. For 13 stars with ½Fe/H� < � 2:6, including nine with ½Fe/H� < � 3:0 and one with ½Fe/H �¼ � 4:0, these are the first reported detailed abundances. For the most metal-poor star in our sample, CS 30336� 049, we measure an abundance pattern that is very similar to stars in the range ½Fe/H ��� 3:5, including a normal C þ N abundance. We also find that it has very low but measurable Sr and Ba, indicating some neutroncapture activity even at this low of a metallicity. We explore this issue further by examining other very neutron captureYdeficient stars and find that, at the lowest levels, [Ba/Sr] exhibits the ratio of the main r-process. We also report on a new r-processYenhanced star, CS 31078� 018. This star has ½Fe/H �¼ � 2:85, ½Eu/Fe �¼ 1:23, and ½Ba/Eu �¼ � 0:51. CS 31078� 018 exhibits an ‘‘actinide boost,’’ i.e., much higher [Th/Eu] than expected and at a similar level to CS 31082� 001. Our spectra allow us to further constrain the abundance scatter at low metallicities, which we then use to fit to the zero-metallicity Type II supernova yields of Heger & Woosley (2008). We find that
The Astrophysical Journal | 2005
Sara Lucatello; Stelios Tsangarides; Timothy C. Beers; Eugenio Carretta; R. Gratton; Sean G. Ryan
Original article can be found at: --http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/--Copyright The American Astronomical Society