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Variations in Star Formation History and the Red Giant Branch Tip

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 Added by Michael Barker
 Publication date 2004
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We examine the reliability of the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) as a distance indicator for stellar populations with different star formation histories (SFHs) when photometric errors and completeness corrections at the TRGB are small. In general, the TRGB-distance method is insensitive to the shape of the SFH except when it produces a stellar population with a significant component undergoing the red giant branch phase transition. The I-band absolute magnitude of the TRGB for the middle and late stages of this transition (~1.3-1.7 Gyr) is several tenths of a magnitude fainter than the canonical value of M_I ~ -4.0. If more than 30% of all stars formed over the lifetime of the Universe are formed at these ages, then the distance could be overestimated by 10-25%. Similarly, the TRGB-distance method is insensitive to the metallicity distribution of stars formed except when the average metallicity is greater than <[Fe/H]> = -0.3. If more than ~70% of all stars formed have [Fe/H] > -0.3, the distance could be overestimated by ~10-45%. We find that two observable quantities, the height of the discontinuity in the luminosity function at the TRGB and the median (V-I)_0 at M_I = -3.5 can be used to test if the aforementioned age and metallicity conditions are met.



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109 - J. Melbourne 2010
We investigate the utility of the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) and the red giant branch (RGB) as probes of the star formation history (SFH) of the nearby (D=2.5 Mpc) dwarf irregular galaxy, KKH 98. Near-infrared (IR) Keck Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics (AO) images resolve 592 IR bright stars reaching over 1 magnitude below the Tip of the Red Giant Branch. Significantly deeper optical (F475W and F814W) Hubble Space Telescope images of the same field contain over 2500 stars, reaching to the Red Clump and the Main Sequence turn-off for 0.5 Gyr old populations. Compared to the optical color magnitude diagram (CMD), the near-IR CMD shows significantly tighter AGB sequences, providing a good probe of the intermediate age (0.5 - 5 Gyr) populations. We match observed CMDs with stellar evolution models to recover the SFH of KKH 98. On average, the galaxy has experienced relatively constant low-level star formation (5 x 10^-4 Mo yr^-1) for much of cosmic time. Except for the youngest main sequence populations (age < 0.1 Gyr), which are typically fainter than the AO data flux limit, the SFH estimated from the the 592 IR bright stars is a reasonable match to that derived from the much larger optical data set. Differences between the optical and IR derived SFHs for 0.1 - 1 Gyr populations suggest that current stellar evolution models may be over-producing the AGB by as much as a factor of three in this galaxy. At the depth of the AO data, the IR luminous stars are not crowded. Therefore these techniques can potentially be used to determine the stellar populations of galaxies at significantly further distances.
144 - Taylor J. Hoyt 2021
A zero point calibration of the Red Giant Branch Tip (TRGB) in the $I$-band is determined from OGLE photometry of the Magellanic Clouds (MCs). It is shown that TRGB measurements made in star-forming regions, with concomitantly high quantities of gas and dust, are less precise and biased to fainter magnitudes, as compared to the same measurements made in quiescent regions. Once these low accuracy fields are excluded from consideration, the TRGB can be used for the first time to constrain the three-dimensional plane geometry of the LMC. Composite CMDs are constructed for the SMC and LMC from only those fields with well-defined TRGB features, and the highest accuracy TRGB zero point calibration to date is presented. The $I$-band TRGB magnitude is measured to be flat over the color range $ 1.45 < (V-I)_0 < 1.95$ mag, with a modest slope introduced when including metal-rich (up to $(V-I)_0 = 2.2$ mag) Tip stars into the fit. Both the flat, blue zero point and the shallow slope calibration are consistent with the canonical value of $-4.05$ mag for the old, metal-poor TRGB, and would appear to resolve a recent debate in the literature over the methods absolute calibration.
In this paper JK_s data from the VISTA Magellanic Cloud (VMC) survey are used to investigate the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) as a distance indicator. A linear fit to recent theoretical models is used which reads M_{K_s} = -4.196 -2.013 (J-K_s), valid in the colour range 0.75 < (J-K_s) < 1.3 mag and in the 2MASS system. The observed TRGB is found based on a classical first-order and a second-order derivative filter applied to the binned luminosity function using the sharpened magnitude that takes the colour term into account. Extensive simulations are carried out to investigate any biases and errors in the derived distance modulus (DM). Based on these simulations criteria are established related to the number of stars per bin in the 0.5 magnitude range below the TRGB and related to the significance with which the peak in the filter response curve is determined such that the derived distances are unbiased. The DMs based on the second-order derivative filter are found to be more stable and are therefore adopted, although this requires twice as many stars per bin. The TRGB method is applied to specific lines-of-sight where independent distance estimates exist, based on detached eclipsing binaries in the LMC and SMC, classical Cepheids in the LMC, RR Lyrae stars in the SMC, and fields in the SMC where the star formation history (together with reddening and distance) has been derived from deep VMC data. The analysis shows that the theoretical calibration is consistent with the data, that the systematic error on the DM is approximately 0.045 mag, and that random errors of 0.015 mag are achievable. Reddening is an important element in deriving the distance: we find mean DMs ranging from 18.92 (for a typical E(B-V) of 0.15 mag) to 19.07 mag (E(B-V) about 0.04) for the SMC, and ranging from 18.48 (E(B-V) about 0.12 mag) to 18.57 mag (E(B-V) about 0.05) for the LMC.
(Abridged) We have investigated the reliability of the widely used I-band Tip of the RGB relative distances for a sample of Local Group galaxies with complex Star Formation Histories (SFR) and Age Metallicity Relationships (AMR) namely the LMC, SMC and LGS3. The use of the K-band is also discussed. By employing theoretical stellar population synthesis techniques, we find that using actual determinations of SFR and AMR of the LMC and SMC, their RGB is populated by stars much younger (by 9 Gyr) than the Galactic globular cluster counterparts, on which the I-band (and K-band) TRGB absolute magnitude is calibrated. This age difference induces a bias in both the photometric metallicity estimates based on the comparison of RGB colours with globular cluster ones, and the TRGB distances. The extent of the distance bias is strongly dependent on the specific TRGB technique applied, and on the assumed I-band BC scale adopted; the correction to apply to the SMC-LMC distance modulus ranges from 0 up to +0.10 mag. LGS3 is an example of galaxy populated mainly by old stars, so that photometric metallicity and distance estimates using globular cluster calibrations are reliable. However, the relative distance moduli between Magellanic Clouds and LGS3 are affected by the population effects discussed for the LMC and SMC. The corrections to apply to the K-band TRGB distances are larger than the I-band case. Our results clearly show that the presence of a well developed RGB in the CMD of a stellar system with a complex SFR does not guarantee that it is populated by globular cluster-like red giants, and therefore the TRGB method for distance determination has to be applied with caution.
PHANGS-HST is an ultraviolet-optical imaging survey of 38 spiral galaxies within ~20 Mpc. Combined with the PHANGS-ALMA, PHANGS-MUSE surveys and other multiwavelength data, the dataset will provide an unprecedented look into the connections between young stars, HII regions, and cold molecular gas in these nearby star-forming galaxies. Accurate distances are needed to transform measured observables into physical parameters (e.g., brightness to luminosity, angular to physical sizes of molecular clouds, star clusters and associations). PHANGS-HST has obtained parallel ACS imaging of the galaxy halos in the F606W and F814W bands. Where possible, we use these parallel fields to derive tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) distances to these galaxies. In this paper, we present TRGB distances for 11 galaxies from ~4 to ~15 Mpc, based on the first year of PHANGS-HST observations. Five of these represent the first published TRGB distance measurements (IC 5332, NGC 2835, NGC 4298, NGC 4321, and NGC 4328), and eight of which are the best available distances to these targets. We also provide a compilation of distances for the 118 galaxies in the full PHANGS sample, which have been adopted for the first PHANGS-ALMA public data release.
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