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Chemical features of the local stellar disk have firmly established that long-term, continuous star formation has been accompanied by a steady rate of accretion of low-metallicity gas from the halo. We now argue that the recent discovery of an enhanced deuterium (D) fraction in the Galaxy is consistent with this picture. We consider two processes: the destruction of D in the interior of stars (astration) and the supply of nearly primordial D associated with the gas infall. Conventional Galactic chemical evolution models predict a monotonic decrease in D/H with time with a present-day D/H abundance which is much lower than the local value recently revealed. This predicted feature is the result of high levels of deuterium astration involved in the formation of the local metal-enhanced disk. Here we propose a new channel to explain the observed enhancement in D/H. Our model, which invokes ongoing gaseous infall and a star formation rate that declines over the past several Gyr, predicts that the D astration is suppressed over the same time interval.
Ultraviolet imaging with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) has revealed an extensive sample of UV-bright stellar complexes in the extreme outer disk of M83, extending to about four times the radius where the majority of HII regions are detected (
This study explored the GALEX ultraviolet (UV) properties of optical red sequence galaxies in 4 rich Abell clusters at z leq 0.1. In particular, we tried to find a hint of merger-induced recent star formation (RSF) in red sequence galaxies. Using the
We have derived the star formation history of the Milky Way disk over the last 2 Gyr from the age distribution diagram of a large sample of open clusters comprising more than 580 objects. By interpreting the age distribution diagram using numerical r
Based on new observations with the Wide Field Camera 3 onboard the Hubble Space Telescope, we report the discovery of an extended main sequence turn-off (eMSTO) in the intermediate-age star cluster NGC411. This is the second case of an eMSTO being id
High-spatial resolution near-infrared (NIR) images of the central 24 x 24 arcsec^2 (~ 2 x 2 kpc^2) of the elliptical galaxy NGC 1052 reveal a total of 25 compact sources randomly distributed in the region. Fifteen of them exhibit Halpha luminosities