Bibcode
Braga, V. F.; Stetson, P. B.; Bono, G.; Dall'Ora, M.; Ferraro, I.; Fiorentino, G.; Freyhammer, L. M.; Iannicola, G.; Marengo, M.; Neeley, J.; Valenti, E.; Buonanno, R.; Calamida, A.; Castellani, M.; da Silva, R.; Degl'Innocenti, S.; Di Cecco, A.; Fabrizio, M.; Freedman, W. L.; Giuffrida, G.; Lub, J.; Madore, B. F.; Marconi, M.; Marinoni, S.; Matsunaga, N.; Monelli, M.; Persson, S. E.; Piersimoni, A. M.; Pietrinferni, A.; Prada-Moroni, P.; Pulone, L.; Stellingwerf, R.; Tognelli, E.; Walker, A. R.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 152, Issue 6, article id. 170, 34 pp. (2016).
Fecha de publicación:
12
2016
Número de citas
60
Número de citas referidas
49
Descripción
New accurate and homogeneous optical UBVRI photometry has been obtained
for variable stars in the Galactic globular cluster ω Cen (NGC
5139). We secured 8202 CCD images covering a time interval of 24 years
and a sky area of 84 × 48 arcmin. The current data were
complemented with data available in the literature and provided new,
homogeneous pulsation parameters (mean magnitudes, luminosity
amplitudes, periods) for 187 candidate ω Cen RR Lyrae (RRLs).
Among them we have 101 RRc (first overtone) and 85 RRab (fundamental)
variables, and a single candidate RRd (double-mode) variable. Candidate
Blazhko RRLs show periods and colors that are intermediate between the
RRc and RRab variables, suggesting that they are transitional objects. A
comparison of the period distribution and the Bailey diagram indicates
that RRLs in ω Cen show a long-period tail not present in typical
Oosterhoff II (OoII) globulars. The RRLs in dwarf spheroidals and in
ultra-faint dwarfs have properties between Oosterhoff intermediate and
OoII clusters. Metallicity plays a key role in shaping the above
evidence. These findings do not support the hypothesis that ω Cen
is the core remnant of a spoiled dwarf galaxy. Using optical
period-Wesenheit relations that are reddening-free and minimally
dependent on metallicity we find a mean distance to ω Cen of 13.71
± 0.08 ± 0.01 mag (semi-empirical and theoretical
calibrations). Finally, we invert the I-band
period-luminosity-metallicity relation to estimate
individual RRLs’ metal abundances. The metallicity distribution
agrees quite well with spectroscopic and photometric metallicity
estimates available in the literature.
Based in part on proprietary data and on data obtained from the ESO
Science Archive Facility under multiple requests by the authors; and in
part upon data distributed by the NOAO Science Archive. NOAO is operated
by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA)
under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation. This
research also benefited from the Digitized Sky Survey service provided
by the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre operated by the National Research
Council of Canada with the support of the Canadian Space Agency. A
detailed description of the log of the observations used in this
investigation is given in Table 1.