The metal abundance distribution of the oldest stellar component in the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy


Abstract in English

(abridged): Low resolution spectroscopy obtained with FORS2 at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) has been used to measure individual metal abundances ([Fe/H]) for 107 RR Lyrae stars, and trace the metal distribution of the oldest stellar component in the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy. Their metallicities have an average value of [Fe/H]=-1.83 +/- 0.03 (r.m.s. 0.26 dex) and cover the metallicity range -2.40<[Fe/H]<-0.85 (only 1 star with [Fe/H]>-1). The star-to-star scatter is larger than typical errors on individual metallicities (+/- 0.15-0.16 dex), indicating a real spread in metal abundances. The radial velocities have a dispersion of 12.9 km/s, consistent with the dispersion derived in Sculptor by Tolstoy et al. (2004). This along with the metallicity distribution, suggests that most of the RR Lyrs arise from the same burst of stellar formation that produced the metal-poor component giving origin to the galaxy blue horizontal branch, and only a few (if any) come from the centrally concentrated metal-rich red horizontal branch population. The spectroscopic metallicities and the apparent luminosities were used to study the luminosity-metallicity relation, for which we derive a shallow slope of 0.09 mag/dex. This result can be due to a high level of evolution off the zero age horizontal branch of the RR Lyrae stars in this galaxy, again in agreement with their origin from the blue horizontal branch population.

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