[DRR2009] LRIS-3 , the SIMBAD biblio

2009ApJ...705..408K - Astrophys. J., 705, 408-425 (2009/November-1)

The masses of population II white dwarfs.

KALIRAI J.S., DAVIS D.S., RICHER H.B., BERGERON P., CATELAN M., HANSEN B.M.S. and RICH R.M.

Abstract (from CDS):

Globular star clusters are among the first stellar populations to have formed in the Milky Way, and thus only a small sliver of their initial spectrum of stellar types are still burning hydrogen on the main sequence today. Almost all of the stars born with more mass than 0.8 M have evolved to form the white dwarf cooling sequence of these systems, and the distribution and properties of these remnants uniquely holds clues related to the nature of the now evolved progenitor stars. With ultra-deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging observations, rich white dwarf populations of four nearby Milky Way globular clusters have recently been uncovered, and are found to extend impressive 5-8 mag in the faint-blue region of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. In this paper, we characterize the properties of these population II remnants by presenting the first direct mass measurements of individual white dwarfs near the tip of the cooling sequence in the nearest of the Milky Way globulars, M4. Based on Gemini/GMOS and Keck/LRIS multiobject spectroscopic observations, our results indicate that 0.8 M population II main-sequence stars evolving today form 0.53±0.01 M white dwarfs. We discuss the implications of this result as it relates to our understanding of stellar structure and evolution of population II stars and for the age of the Galactic halo, as measured with white dwarf cooling theory.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): globular clusters: individual: M4 - stars: evolution - stars: mass loss - techniques: spectroscopic - white dwarfs

Nomenclature: Table 1: [DRR2009] LRIS-NN (Nos 0-30), [DRR2009] GMOS-NN (Nos 5, 17) added.

Simbad objects: 51

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