Field O Stars: A Mode of Sparse Star Formation Joel Lamb Sally Oey University of Michigan.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
P.Tisserand Rencontres du Vietnam Final results on galactic dark matter from the EROS-2 microlensing survey ~ images processed - 55 million.
Advertisements

The Origin of Brown Dwarfs Kevin L. Luhman Penn State.
Improving mass and age estimates of unresolved stellar clusters Margaret Hanson & Bogdan Popescu Department of Physics.
Edo Berger Carnegie Observatories Edo Berger Carnegie Observatories Probing Stellar to Galactic Scales with Gamma-Ray Bursts.
Multi-band Infrared Mapping of the Galactic Nuclear Region Q. D. Wang (PI), H. Dong, D. Calzetti (Umass), Cotera (SETI), S. Stolovy, M. Muno, J. Mauerhan,
9/19/2014 Claus Leitherer: Lyman Continuum Leakage 1 Lyman Continuum Leakage in the Local Universe Claus Sanch Tim Janice Sally Roderik Leitherer Borthakur.
CLASH: Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble ACS Parallels WFC3 Parallels 6 arcmin. = 2.2 z=0.5 Footprints of HST Cameras: ACS FOV in.
Chania, Crete, August 2004 “The environment of galaxies” Pierre-Alain Duc Recycling in the galaxy environment F. Bournaud J. Braine U. Lisenfeld P. Amram.
 Star clusters may often be modelled as simple stellar populations → useful tools to constrain the star formation history of their host galaxies (refs).
Life Before the Fall: Group Galaxy Evolution Prior to Cluster Assembly Anthony Gonzalez (Florida) Kim-Vy Tran (CfA) Michelle Conbere (Florida) Dennis Zaritsky.
Massive Star Clusters in Non- Interacting Galaxies Dynamical Mass Estimates and the (I)MF Søren S. Larsen ESO / ST-ECF, Garching Tom Richtler, Concepcion.
Evolution of Luminous Galaxy Pairs out to z=1.2 in the HST/ACS COSMOS Field Jeyhan Kartaltepe, IfA, Hawaii Dave Sanders, IfA, Hawaii Nick Scoville, Caltech.
Cambridge, June 13-16, 2005 A Study of Massive Proto- and Pre-stellar Candidates with the SEST Antenna Maite Beltrán Universitat de Barcelona J. Brand.
Nov. 6, 2008Thanks to Henrietta Leavitt Cepheid Multiplicity and Masses: Fundamental Parameters Nancy Remage Evans.
The Complex Star Formation History of NGC 1569 L. Angeretti 1, M. Tosi 2, L. Greggio 3, E. Sabbi 1, A. Aloisi 4, C. Leitherer 4 The object The observations.
Evolution of Luminous Galaxy Pairs out to z=1.2 in the HST/ACS COSMOS Field Jeyhan Kartaltepe, IfA, Hawaii Dave Sanders, IfA, Hawaii Nick Scoville, Caltech.
Galaxies at High Redshift and Reionization Bunker, A., Stanway, E., Ellis, R., Lacy, M., McMahon, R., Eyles, L., Stark D., Chiu, K. 2009, ASP Conference.
X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies Vicky Kalogera Northwestern University Super Star Clusters Starburst galaxies Ultra-Luminous X-Ray Sources Elliptical.
The Properties of LBGs at z>5 Matt Lehnert (MPE) Malcolm Bremer (Bristol) Aprajita Verma (MPE) Natascha Förster Schreiber (MPE) and Laura Douglas (Bristol)
Adam L. Kraus February 1, 2007 Multiple Star Formation at the Bottom of the IMF.
A survey of Probable Open Cluster Remnants in the Galactic disk S. Villanova & G. Carraro, Universita’ di Padova.
An analytic explanation of the stellar initial mass function from the theory of spatial networks Andrei Klishin* (MIT Physics) & Igor Chilingarian (SAO)
Star and Planet Formation Sommer term 2007 Henrik Beuther & Sebastian Wolf 16.4 Introduction (H.B. & S.W.) 23.4 Physical processes, heating and cooling.
Courtesy Jason Harris, Steward Observatory Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of Extreme Star Formation Michael R. Meyer Steward.
A. Zezas (PI; UoC/SAO) SMC XVP Collaboration: P. Plucinsky; SMC XVP Collaboration: C. Badenes; B. Blair; R. Di Stefano; J. Drake; A. Foster; T. Gaetz;
Overview of Astronomy AST 200. Astronomy Nature designs the Experiment Nature designs the Experiment Tools Tools 1) Imaging 2) Spectroscopy 3) Computational.
Luminosity and Mass functions in spectroscopically-selected groups at z~0.5 George Hau, Durham University Dave Wilman (MPE) Mike Balogh (Waterloo) Richard.
Stellar Populations Science Knut Olsen. The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies Context – Hierarchical structure formation does an excellent job.
The Extremely Red Objects in the CLASH Fields The Extremely Red Galaxies in CLASH Fields Xinwen Shu (CEA, Saclay and USTC) CLASH 2013 Team meeting – September.
Hot gas in galaxy pairs Olga Melnyk. It is known that the dark matter is concentrated in individual haloes of galaxies and is located in the volume of.
Compact object merger rates Richard O’Shaughnessy Vicky Kalogera, Chris Belczynski, Chunglee Kim, Tassos Fragos GWDAW-10 Dec 14, 2005.
The Environmental Effect on the UV Color-Magnitude Relation of Early-type Galaxies Hwihyun Kim Journal Club 10/24/2008 Schawinski et al. 2007, ApJS 173,
High-Redshift Galaxies in Cluster Fields Wei Zheng, Larry Bradley, and the CLASH high-z search group.
LMXB in Globular Clusters: Optical Properties Sivakoff et al David Riebel & Justice Bruursema.
The Least Luminous Galaxies: Faint But Not Dull Daniel Zucker Macquarie University/ Anglo-Australian Observatory.
Sami Dib NBI, STARPLAN Unveiling the diversity of the MW stellar clusters + Sacha Hony (ITA/Heidelberg) Stefan Schmeja (ARI/ Heidelberg) Dimitrios Gouliermis.
S. B. Holmes, P. Massey (Lowell Observatory) Detections Using data obtained with the MOSAIC 8k x 8k CCD at the 4-m Mayall telescope at KPNO, we have been.
New and Odds on Globular Cluster Stellar Populations: an Observational Point of View (The Snapshot Database) G.Piotto, I. King, S. Djorgovski and G. Bono,
Expected Coalescence Rate of NS/NS Binaries for Ground Based Interferometers Tania Regimbau OCA/ARTEMIS on the behalf of J.A. de Freitas Pacheco, T. Regimbau,
Is the Initial Mass Function universal? Morten Andersen, M. R. Meyer, J. Greissl, B. D. Oppenheimer, M. Kenworthy, D. McCarthy Steward Observatory, University.
Subaru Wide-Field Survey of M87 Globular Cluster Populations N.Arimoto (NAOJ) N.Tamura, R.Sharples (Durham) M.Onodera (Tokyo, NAOJ), K.Ohta(Kyoto) J.-C.Cuillandre.
Surveying the Extremities of the Magellanic Clouds A work in progress A. Saha Collaborators: Ed Olszewski Chris Smith Knut Olsen Jason Harris Armin Rest.
Philamentary Structure and Velocity Gradients in the Orion A Cloud
The relation between the galaxy stellar mass distribution and the mass of its hosting halo BENEDETTA VULCANI KAVLI IPMU What Regulates Galaxy Evolution?
VALLIA ANTONIOU IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY High Energy View of Accreting Objects: AGN and X-ray Binaries Agios Nikolaos, Crete, Greece October 2010.
Galaxies and X-ray Populations G. Fabbiano Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Sally Oey University of Michigan Cathie Clarke IoA, Cambridge HDF Smith et al. / MCELS Massive Stars: Feedback Effects in the Local Universe.
The First Galaxies in the Hubble Frontier Fields Rachana Bhatawdekar, Christopher Conselice The University of Nottingham.
The First Galaxies in the Hubble Frontier Fields Rachana Bhatawdekar, Christopher Conselice The University of Nottingham.
David R. Law Hubble Fellow, UCLA The Physical Structure of Galaxies at z ~ John McDonald, CFHT Galaxies in the Distant Universe: Ringberg Castle.
The 7-year view of the accreting X-ray binaries with INTEGRAL R.Krivonos, M.Revnivtsev, S.Tsygankov, E.Churazov, R.Sunyaev MPA Garching, Germany; IKI,
SWIRE view on the "Passive Universe": Studying the evolutionary mass function and clustering of galaxies with the SIRTF Wide-Area IR Extragalactic Survey.
FIRST LIGHT A selection of future facilities relevant to the formation and evolution of galaxies Wavelength Sensitivity Spatial resolution.
Starburst galaxies are important constituents of the universe at all accessible redshifts. However, a detailed and quantitative understanding of the starburst.
Stars, metals and planets? I. Neill Reid STScI. The question Over 100 extrasolar planets have been discovered since this includes several multiplanet.
The Birth of Stars and Planets in the Orion Nebula K. Smith (STScI)
KASI Galaxy Evolution Journal Club A Massive Protocluster of Galaxies at a Redshift of z ~ P. L. Capak et al. 2011, Nature, in press (arXive: )
1 Dynamical Interactions and Brown Dwarfs Michael F. Sterzik, ESO Richard H. Durisen, Indiana University Hierarchical fragmentation and „two-step“ dynamical.
Investigating the Low- Mass Stellar Initial Mass Function in Draco Soroush Sotoudeh (University of Minnesota) Daniel Weisz, Andrew Dolphin, Evan Skillman.
Super star clusters Super star clusters and and star-formation in interacting galaxies star-formation in interacting galaxies Zara RANDRIAMANAKOTO Zara.
Where and How Are Massive Stars Formed in Isolation? You-Hua Chu (U of Illinois) In collaboration with: R. Gruendl, R. Chen*, M. Gelman, M. Johnson (Illinois)
INTRODUCTION Blue straggler stars (BSSs) are brighter, bluer and more massive than stars occupying the MSTO in clusters. There is mounting evidence to.
Towards Realistic Modeling of Massive Star Clusters Oleg Gnedin (University of Michigan) graduate student Hui Li.
Bayesian analysis of joint strong gravitational lensing and dynamic galactic mass in SLACS: evidence of line-of-sight contamination Antonio C. C. Guimarães.
Studying Nearby Starbursts with HST
The primordial binary population in Sco OB2
IMF inferred based on field stars (red) and based on a variety of clusters (blue, green, and black) (Kroupa 2002)
Probing the IMF Star Formation in Massive Clusters.
HST Surveys of the LMC Planetary Nebulae
Multicolor study of the interacting galaxies of Leo Triplet
Presentation transcript:

Field O Stars: A Mode of Sparse Star Formation Joel Lamb Sally Oey University of Michigan

Background Dwarf galaxies exhibit inefficient star formation Fundamental properties of global star formation –Stellar initial mass function (IMF) N(m) dm  m dm (Salpeter, 1955) Different slope? –e.g. Field Star IMF steeper in SMC (Massey 2002) –Cluster mass function & clustering law n(M) dM  M -2 dM n(N * ) dN *  N * -2 dN * Low mass, N * cutoff? –Field O stars probe an extreme regime

Target: Field O Stars Probe the limits of sparse, massive star formation –Origin of Field O Stars “Tip of the iceberg” Formed in isolation? Runaways –IMF of any companions Separate mode of star formation?

SMC Spatially complete sample of O stars –376 total O stars, 91 field stars SMC O star cluster distribution –n(N * ) dN *  N * -2.3 dN * (Oey, King, & Parker 2004) –Slope extends to N * =1 Field O stars SMC close neighbor –HST ACS

Observations Targets selected using ground-based imaging –Magellanic Clouds Photometric Survey (MCPS) (Zaritsky et. al. 2002) New HST ACS SNAP observations –8 SMC field O stars observed –F555W (V) and F814W (I) filters - probe to F0 V and G0 V stars 1 pc

Search for Companions Map stellar distribution around the 8 field O stars –F814W image –Probes to 1 M  –Stellar density enhancements Poisson Statistics

“Tip-of-an-Iceberg” Probability = p n · e -p / n! < 0.01%

Sparse Star Formation 3 of 8 field O stars show evidence of companions –Galactic study: 12% of field O stars have evidence of clustering (de Wit, et al. 2004) Extremely low mass star-forming regions with O stars

IMF of Companions Reddening: MCPS (Zaritsky et. al. 2002) Constrain masses of companion stars –Geneva stellar evolutionary tracks SMC metallicity (Charbonnel et. al. 1993) –IMF of “tip-of-the- iceberg” clusters Small samples Composite IMF

“Tip-of-the-Iceberg” IMF Flat Composite IMF Missing low mass stars –Consistent with Salpeter? Different regime of star formation Potentially non-standard IMF Fitted slope = -0.67±0.71 Salpeter slope = -1.35

Work In Progress Analysis of Results –Fit within empirical framework? Global clustering law Initial Mass Function –M ecl - m max relation –m max,2 /m max Weidner & Kroupa (2006) Oey & Clarke (2005)

Future Work Remaining stars truly alone? Completing the spectroscopic survey of SMC field O Stars –Field massive star IMF –Runaway Fraction –Binary Fraction

Conclusions 3 of 8 observations confirmed as sparse star-forming regions with O stars –Important role in dwarf galaxies? “Tip-of-the-iceberg” flat IMF –Missing low-mass companions –Different mode of star formation?