Bibcode
Marín-Franch, A.; Aparicio, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 450, Issue 3, May II 2006, pp.979-992
Fecha de publicación:
5
2006
Revista
Número de citas
18
Número de citas referidas
15
Descripción
Aims.A new theoretical calibration of surface-brightness fluctuations
(SBF) for single age, single metallicity stellar populations is
presented for the optical and near-IR broad-band filters, as well as for
the HST WFPC2 and ACS filters. Methods: .The IAC-star code is
used. Two Padua and the Teramo stellar evolution libraries have been
considered. A set of single-burst stellar populations (SSP) with a wide
range of ages (3 Gy-15 Gy) and metallicities (Z = 0.0001-0.03) have been
computed using each one of the three considered stellar evolution
libraries. For each SSP, color indexes and SBF magnitudes are given for
the filters U, B, V, R, I, J, H, K, {F218W}, {F336W}, {F439W}, {F450W},
{F555W} and {F814W}, and for the first time, an uncertainty has been
estimated for the SBF theoretical calibration. Results: .Although
some differences might be addressed, the Padua and Teramo stellar
evolution libraries provide comparable SBF results. A detailed
comparison of the present SBF calibrations with both previous
calibrations and observational data is also presented. Comparing the
different models with observational data, Padua based models reproduce
fairly well the optical data for globular clusters, while Teramo based
models fits both optical galaxies and globular clusters data, as well.
In the near-IR wavelengths, the Teramo based models provide the only SBF
theoretical calibration to date able to properly reproduce the
observational data for superclusters, with intermediate-to-low
metallicity. As a conclusion, Teramo based models work better than any
other calibration reproducing observational data for the near-IR
wavelengths. Furthermore, the age-metallicity degeneracy is broken for
low metallicity (Z≤0.0037) stellar populations. Finally, a clear
relation between the B SBF absolute magnitude of a stellar population
and its metallicity is found for intermediate to old populations, so the
B-band fluctuation magnitude is proposed as a metallicity tracer. The
present theoretical calibration shows that the analysis of SBF provides
a very powerful tool in the study and characterization of unresolved
stellar populations.