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Using the Multi-Object Adaptive Optics demonstrator RAVEN to observe metal-poor stars in and towards the Galactic Centre

Authors :
Lamb, Masen
Venn, Kim
Andersen, David
Oya, Shin
Shetrone, Matthew
Fattahi, Azadeh
Howes, Louise
Asplund, Martin
Lardiere, Olivier
Akiyama, Masayuki
Ono, Yoshito
Terada, Hiroshi
Hayano, Yutaka
Suzuki, Genki
Blain, Celia
Jackson, Kathryn
Correia, Carlos
Youakim, Kris
Bradley, Colin
Lamb, Masen
Venn, Kim
Andersen, David
Oya, Shin
Shetrone, Matthew
Fattahi, Azadeh
Howes, Louise
Asplund, Martin
Lardiere, Olivier
Akiyama, Masayuki
Ono, Yoshito
Terada, Hiroshi
Hayano, Yutaka
Suzuki, Genki
Blain, Celia
Jackson, Kathryn
Correia, Carlos
Youakim, Kris
Bradley, Colin
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The chemical abundances for five metal-poor stars in and towards the Galactic bulge have been determined from H-band infrared spectroscopy taken with the RAVEN multi-object adaptive optics science demonstrator and the IRCS spectrograph at the Subaru 8.2-m telescope. Three of these stars are in the Galactic bulge and have metallicities between -2.1 < [Fe/H] < -1.5, and high [alpha/Fe] ~+0.3, typical of Galactic disk and bulge stars in this metallicity range; [Al/Fe] and [N/Fe] are also high, whereas [C/Fe] < +0.3. An examination of their orbits suggests that two of these stars may be confined to the Galactic bulge and one is a halo trespasser, though proper motion values used to calculate orbits are quite uncertain. An additional two stars in the globular cluster M22 show [Fe/H] values consistent to within 1 sigma, although one of these two stars has [Fe/H] = -2.01 +/- 0.09, which is on the low end for this cluster. The [alpha/Fe] and [Ni/Fe] values differ by 2 sigma, with the most metal-poor star showing significantly higher values for these elements. M22 is known to show element abundance variations, consistent with a multi-population scenario (i.e. Marino et al. 2009, 2011; Alves-Brito et al. 2012) though our results cannot discriminate this clearly given our abundance uncertainties. This is the first science demonstration of multi-object adaptive optics with high resolution infrared spectroscopy, and we also discuss the feasibility of this technique for use in the upcoming era of 30-m class telescope facilities.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures, Accepted to MNRAS

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1098110885
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093.mnras.stw2865