YELLOW SUPERGIANTS IN THE ANDROMEDA GALAXY (M31)

被引:67
|
作者
Drout, Maria R. [1 ]
Massey, Philip [1 ]
Meynet, Georges [2 ]
Tokarz, Susan [3 ]
Caldwell, Nelson [3 ]
机构
[1] Lowell Observ, Flagstaff, AZ 86001 USA
[2] Univ Geneva, Observ Geneva, CH-1290 Versoix, Switzerland
[3] Smithsonian Astrophys Observ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
来源
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL | 2009年 / 703卷 / 01期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
galaxies: individual (M31); galaxies: stellar content; stars: evolution; supergiants; CURRENTLY FORMING STARS; BVRI CCD PHOTOMETRY; LOCAL GROUP; STELLAR EVOLUTION; RED SUPERGIANTS; MASSIVE STARS; NEARBY GALAXIES; EFFECTIVE TEMPERATURES; UBVRI PHOTOMETRY; LUMINOUS STARS;
D O I
10.1088/0004-637X/703/1/441
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
The yellow supergiant content of nearby galaxies can provide a critical test of stellar evolution theory, bridging the gap between the hot, massive stars and the cool red supergiants. But, this region of the color-magnitude diagram is dominated by foreground contamination, requiring membership to somehow be determined. Fortunately, the large negative systemic velocity of M31, coupled to its high rotation rate, provides the means for separating the contaminating foreground dwarfs from the bona fide yellow supergiants within M31. We obtained radial velocities of similar to 2900 individual targets within the correct color-magnitude range corresponding to masses of 12 M-circle dot and higher. A comparison of these velocities to those expected from M31's rotation curve reveals 54 rank-1 (near certain) and 66 rank-2 (probable) yellow supergiant members, indicating a foreground contamination >= 96%. We expect some modest contamination from Milky Way halo giants among the remainder, particularly for the rank-2 candidates, and indeed follow-up spectroscopy of a small sample eliminates four rank 2's while confirming five others. We find excellent agreement between the location of yellow supergiants in the H-R diagram and that predicted by the latest Geneva evolutionary tracks that include rotation. However, the relative number of yellow supergiants seen as a function of mass varies from that predicted by the models by a factor of > 10, in the sense that more high-mass yellow supergiants are predicted than those are actually observed. Comparing the total number (16) of > 20 M-circle dot yellow supergiants with the estimated number (24,800) of unevolved O stars indicates that the duration of the yellow supergiant phase is similar to 3000 years. This is consistent with what the 12 M-circle dot and 15 M-circle dot evolutionary tracks predict, but disagrees with the 20,000-80,000 year timescales predicted by the models for higher masses.
引用
收藏
页码:441 / 460
页数:20
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