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The stellar population and interstellar medium in NGC 6822

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 Added by Erwin de Blok
 Publication date 2005
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present a comprehensive study of the stellar population and the interstellar medium in NGC 6822 using high-quality HI data (obtained with the Australia Telescope Compact Array) and optical broad/narrow-band data (obtained with Subaru and the INT). Our H$alpha$ observations are an order of magnitude deeper than previous studies and reveal a complex filamentary network covering almost the entire central disk of NGC 6822. We find hitherto unknown HII regions in the outskirts of NGC 6822 and the companion galaxy. The old and intermediate age stellar population can be traced out to radii of over 0.6 deg (> 5 kpc), significantly more extended than the HI disk. In sharp contrast, the distribution of the young, blue stars, closely follows the distribution of the HI disk and displays a highly structured morphology. We find evidence for an older stellar population in the companion galaxy -- the current star formation activity, although likely to have been triggered by the interaction with NGC 6822, is not the first star formation episode in this object. We show that the properties of the giant kpc-sized hole in the outer HI disk of NGC 6822 are consistent with it being formed by the effects of stellar evolution.



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We present a comprehensive study of massive young stellar objects (YSOs) in the metal-poor galaxy NGC 6822 using IRAC and MIPS data obtained from the {em Spitzer Space Telescope}. We find over 500 new YSO candidates in seven massive star-formation regions; these sources were selected using six colour-magnitude cuts. Via spectral energy distribution fitting to the data with YSO radiative transfer models we refine this list, identifying 105 high-confidence and 88 medium-confidence YSO candidates. For these sources we constrain their evolutionary state and estimate their physical properties. The majority of our YSO candidates are massive protostars with an accreting envelope in the initial stages of formation. We fit the mass distribution of the Stage I YSOs with a Kroupa initial mass function and determine a global star-formation rate of 0.039 $M_{odot} yr^{-1}$. This is higher than star-formation rate estimates based on integrated UV fluxes. The new YSO candidates are preferentially located in clusters which correspond to seven active high-mass star-formation regions which are strongly correlated with the 8 and 24 $mu$m emission from PAHs and warm dust. This analysis reveals an embedded high-mass star-formation region, Spitzer I, which hosts the highest number of massive YSO candidates in NGC 6822. The properties of Spitzer I suggest it is younger and more active than the other prominent H,{sc ii} and star-formation regions in the galaxy.
The nearby ($sim$500 kpc) metal-poor ([Fe/H] $approx$ -1.2; $Z$ $approx$ 30% $Z_{odot}$) star-forming galaxy NGC 6822 has a metallicity similar to systems at the epoch of peak star formation. Through identification and study of dusty and dust-producing stars, it is therefore a useful laboratory to shed light on the dust life cycle in the early Universe. We present a catalog of sources combining near- and mid-IR photometry from the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT; $J$, $H$, and $K$) and the $Spitzer$ $Space$ $Telescope$ (IRAC 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 $mu$m and MIPS 24 $mu$m). This catalog is employed to identify dusty and evolved stars in NGC 6822 utilizing three color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs). With diagnostic CMDs covering a wavelength range spanning the near- and mid-IR, we develop color cuts using kernel density estimate (KDE) techniques to identify dust-producing evolved stars, including red supergiant (RSG) and thermally-pulsing asymptotic giant branch (TP-AGB) star candidates. In total, we report 1,292 RSG candidates, 1,050 oxygen-rich AGB star candidates, and 560 carbon-rich AGB star candidates with high confidence in NGC 6822. Our analysis of the AGB stars suggests a robust population inhabiting the central stellar bar of the galaxy, with a measured global stellar metallicity of [Fe/H] = -1.286 $pm$ 0.095, consistent with previous studies. In addition, we identify 277 young stellar object (YSO) candidates. The detection of a large number of YSO candidates within a centrally-located, compact cluster reveals the existence of an embedded, high-mass star-formation region that has eluded previous detailed study. Spitzer I appears to be younger and more active than the other prominent star-forming regions in the galaxy.
121 - A. Karampelas 2009
The star complexes (large scale star forming regions) of NGC 6822 were traced and mapped and their size distribution was compared with the size distribution of star complexes in the Magellanic Clouds (MCs). Furthermore, the spatial distributions of different age stellar populations were compared with each other. The star complexes of NGC 6822 were determined by using the isopleths, based on star counts, of the young stars of the galaxy, using a statistical cutoff limit in density. In order to map them and determine their geometrical properties, an ellipse was fitted to every distinct region satisfying this minimum limit. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistical test was used to study possible patterns in their size distribution. Isopleths were also used to study the stellar populations of NGC 6822. The star complexes of NGC 6822 were detected and a list of their positions and sizes was produced. Indications of hierarchical star formation, in terms of spatial distribution, time evolution and preferable sizes were found in NGC 6822 and the MCs. The spatial distribution of the various age stellar populations has indicated traces of an interaction in NGC 6822, dated before 350 +/- 50 Myr.
52 - A. Aloisi 2000
We present HST NICMOS photometry of the resolved stellar population in NGC 1569. The CMD in the F110W and F160W photometric bands contains ~2400 stars with a formal photometric error < 0.1 mag down to J~23.5 and H~22.5. We describe the data processing which is required to calibrate the instrumental peculiarities of NICMOS. Two different packages for PSF-fitting photometry are used to strengthen the photometric results in the crowded stellar field of NGC 1569. The resulting CMD is discussed in terms of the major evolutionary properties of the resolved stellar populations. For a distance modulus of 26.71 and a reddening E(B-V)=0.56, our CMD samples stars down to ~0.8 Mo, corresponding to look-back times > 15 Gyr. This is clear indication of SF activity spanning an entire Hubble time. The metallicity of the reddest RGB stars is in better agreement with Z=0.004 as measured in HII regions, than with Z=0.0004 as expected from the stellar ages. The presence of - yet undetected - very metal-poor stars embedded in the stellar distribution around J=22.75 and J-H=1.15 is, however, not ruled out. The youngest stars (< 50 Myr) are preferentially found around the two central super star clusters, whereas the oldest population has a more uniform spatial distribution. A SFR per unit area of 1 Mo yr*(-1) kpc*(-2) and a mass formed in stars of ~ 1.4x10*6 Mo in the last 50 Myr are derived from the CMD. The NIR CMD places strong constraints on the lower limit of the onset of SF in NGC 1569. The exceptionally high crowding in the NICMOS images of NGC 1569 is a challenge for the photometric analysis. As a result, optical and NIR images of NGC 1569 sample different populations and cannot be cross-correlated. Nevertheless, we demonstrate the consistency of the SF histories derived from the optical and NIR CMDs.
72 - WJG de Blok 2005
We investigate the star formation threshold in NGC 6822, a nearby Local Group dwarf galaxy, on sub-kpc scales using high-resolution, wide-field, deep HI, Halpha and optical data. In a study of the HI velocity profiles we identify a cool and warm neutral component in the Interstellar Medium of NGC 6822. We show that the velocity dispersion of the cool component (~4 km/s) when used with a Toomre-Q criterion gives an optimal description of ongoing star formation in NGC 6822, superior to that using the more conventional dispersion value of 6 km/s. However, a simple constant surface density criterion for star formation gives an equally superior description. We also investigate the two-dimensional distribution of Q and the star formation threshold and find that these results also hold locally. The range in gas density in NGC 6822 is much larger than the range in critical density, and we argue that the conditions for star formation in NGC 6822 are fully driven by this density criterion. Star formation is local, and in NGC 6822 global rotational or shear parameters are apparently not important.
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