Bibcode
Fiorentino, G.; Stetson, P. B.; Monelli, M.; Bono, G.; Bernard, E. J.; Pietrinferni, A.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 759, Issue 1, article id. L12, 5pp, (2012).
Advertised on:
11
2012
Citations
21
Refereed citations
16
Description
We present a study of short-period, central helium-burning variable
stars in the Local Group dwarf spheroidal galaxy LeoI, including 106 RR
Lyrae stars and 51 Cepheids. So far, this is the largest sample of
Cepheids and the largest Cepheids to RR Lyrae ratio found in such a kind
of galaxy. Comparison with other Local Group dwarf spheroidals, Carina
and Fornax, shows that the period distribution of RR Lyrae stars is
quite similar, suggesting similar properties of the parent populations,
whereas the Cepheid period distribution in LeoI peaks at longer periods
(P ~ 1.26 days instead of ~0.5 days) and spans over a broader range,
from 0.5 to 1.78 days. Evolutionary and pulsation predictions indicate,
assuming a mean metallicity peaked within –1.5 <~ [Fe/H] <~
–1.3, that the current sample of LeoI Cepheids traces a unique mix
of anomalous Cepheids (blue extent of the red-clump, partially
electron-degenerate central helium-burning stars) and short-period
classical Cepheids (blue-loop, quiescent central helium-burning stars).
Current evolutionary prescriptions also indicate that the transition
mass between the two different groups of stars is M HeF ~ 2.1
M ☉, and it is constant for stars metal-poorer than
[Fe/H] ~ –0.7. Finally, we briefly outline the different
implications of the current findings on the star formation history of
LeoI.
Related projects
Galaxy Evolution in the Local Group
Galaxy formation and evolution is a fundamental Astrophysical problem. Its study requires “travelling back in time”, for which there are two complementary approaches. One is to analyse galaxy properties as a function of red-shift. Our team focuses on the other approach, called “Galactic Archaeology”. It is based on the determination of galaxy
Matteo
Monelli