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UVX. Nick Cowan UW Astronomy May 2005. What’s a UVX?. Wien Tail for ordinary stars. O’Connell 1999. UVX. Blue-end of an elliptical galaxy’s spectrum. Crazy Gamma-Ray Stuff?. No, just Crazy Hot Stars. Outline. UVX in elliptical galaxies Candidates for the UVX. What took so long?.
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UVX Nick Cowan UW Astronomy May 2005
What’s a UVX? Wien Tail for ordinary stars O’Connell 1999 UVX Blue-end of an elliptical galaxy’s spectrum
Crazy Gamma-Ray Stuff? No, just Crazy Hot Stars.
Outline • UVX in elliptical galaxies • Candidates for the UVX
What took so long? • Few long-lived space-based UV telescopes. • Galaxies have low surface brightnesses in the UV. • UV detectors have poor quantum efficiencies. • Have to filter out L emission and “red leak”.
Elliptical Galaxies in a slide • Ellipsoidal conglomeration of stars. • 107-1013 solar masses. • 10-1-102 kpc in size. • Not much ISM. • Full of old stars. • Lot o’ globular clusters. • Sometimes have AGN.
UVX has constant surface brightness Bad data reduction
The UVX is metal-rich! Metal Rich Metal Poor As in 2500 A As in 1500 A
GALEX/SDSS Results ~Metallicity ~Age ~Dynamics
GCs can’t account for the UVX Absorption from MgI and MgH
Mass loss allows older stars to masquerade as hot young stars…
Zero Age Horizontal Branch • 4,000-40,000 K surface T • ~0.5 Msolar He core • ~0-0.3 Msolar H envelope • Scatter in mass-loss leads to scatter in envelope mass and initial temperatures. • Typically come in via the RGB and exit via the AGB.
Standard Horizontal Branch and Metallicity • High metallicity stars populate the “Red Clump” and the cool end of the HB. • Low metallicity stars populate the aptly-named HB. • Really low metallicity stars populate the oxymoronicly vertical “Extreme HB”. Or do they?
Parameters for UVX stars • Age • Y • Z • Y/Z • Mass Loss
Why a Blue HB is confusing(the same reason why Pam still shows up in Playboy) (Bad news for K-correction)
Do we actually see these things? NGC 2808 Sweigart 2002
Other sources of UV fluxin ellipticals • Young stellar populations. • Low-luminosity AGNs. • Hot gas. • Blue stragglers.
Binaries and Dynamic Effects • GCs are a good testing ground for stellar interactions. • Mergers and collisions form blue stragglers. • Roche-lobe mass-loss leads to exposed He cores. • Higher metallicity stars have more extended envelopes so might suffer greater mass-loss. • No sign of AGB-Manqué
Conclusions • UVX tells us about the strange late stages of stellar evolution. • Observations show that there is a large variability of UVX. • However, this variability does not correlate with any obervables. • Simulations predict that the behavior of these stars should be highly sensitive to mass-loss (which in turn has strange dependences on observables). • We don’t know how to nail down mass loss observationaly so UVX is not a useful metric yet.
Summary • Elliptical galaxies aren’t as boring as you thought. • Old, metal-rich stars can be blue, too. • Someone really ought to figure out this mass-loss stuff.
Good Canadian kid References • Rich et al. 2005 ApJL 619 107-110 • Thomas et al. 2005 ApJ 621 673-694 • Brown 2003 astro-ph/0308509 • Gil De Paz 2003 AAS Meeting 203 • O’Connell 1999 Annu. Rev. A & A • Dorman 1996 astro-ph/9612008 The puck American goalie