New uvby-β data are provided for 442 high-velocity and metal-poor stars; 90 of these stars have been observed previously by us, and 352 are new. When combined with our previous two photometric catalogues, the data base is now made up of 1533 high-velocity and metalpoor stars, all with uvby-β photometry and complete kinematic data, such as proper motions and radial velocities taken from the literature. −0.4, 160, 10.0, 45.8). The seven most metal-poor halo groups, −2.31 ≤ [Fe/H] ≤ −1.31, show a mean age of 13.0 ± 0.2 (mean error) Gyr, giving a mean difference from the WMAP results for the age of the Universe of 0.7 ± 0.3 Gyr. These results for the ages and components of the thick disk and for the age of the Galactic halo field stars are discussed in terms of various models and ideas for the formation of galaxies and their stellar populations.
We report a multisite photometric campaign for the β Cephei star 12 Lacertae. 750 h of high‐quality differential photoelectric Strömgren, Johnson and Geneva time‐series photometry were obtained with nine telescopes during 190 nights. Our frequency analysis results in the detection of 23 sinusoidal signals in the light curves. Ten of those correspond to independent pulsation modes, and the remainder are combination frequencies. We find some slow aperiodic variability such as that seemingly present in several β Cephei stars. We perform mode identification from our colour photometry, derive the spherical degree ℓ for the five strongest modes unambiguously and provide constraints on ℓ for the weaker modes. We find a mixture of modes of 0 ≤ℓ≤ 4. In particular, we prove that the previously suspected rotationally split triplet within the modes of 12 Lac consists of modes of different ℓ; their equal frequency splitting must thus be accidental. One of the periodic signals we detected in the light curves is argued to be a linearly stable mode excited to visible amplitude by non‐linear mode coupling via a 2:1 resonance. We also find a low‐frequency signal in the light variations whose physical nature is unclear; it could be a parent or daughter mode resonantly coupled. The remaining combination frequencies are consistent with simple light‐curve distortions. The range of excited pulsation frequencies of 12 Lac may be sufficiently large that it cannot be reproduced by standard models. We suspect that the star has a larger metal abundance in the pulsational driving zone, a hypothesis also capable of explaining the presence of β Cephei stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
Abstract. We present the first results of a 2-year high-resolution spectroscopy campaign of 59 candidate γ Doradus stars which were mainly discovered from the HIPPARCOS astrometric mission. More than 60% of the stars present line profile variations which can be interpreted as due to pulsation related to γ Doradus stars. For all stars we also derived the projected rotation velocity (up to more than 200 km s −1 ). The amplitude ratios 2K/∆m for the main HIPPARCOS frequency are in the range 35−96 km s −1 mag −1 . About 50% of the candidates are possible members of binary systems, with 20 stars being confirmed γ Doradus. At least 6 stars present composite spectra, and in all but one case (for which only one spectrum could be obtained), the narrow component shows line profile variations, pointing towards an uncomfortable situation if this narrow component originates from a shell surrounding the star. This paper is the first of a series concerning mode identification using both photometric and spectroscopic methods for the confirmed γ Doradus stars of the present sample.
A catalogue of uvby-β photometry for 87 of the turn-off and subgiant stars from the HK survey of Beers et al. (1992) is given. Most of these stars have [Fe/H]≤ −2.5. These photometric data have been taken and reduced using the same techniques as in our previous two uvby-β catalogues. An error analysis has been made; typical mean observational errors for a star with V = 14. m 2 are 0.008, 0.007, 0.011, 0.010 and 0.012 in V , (b − y), m1, c1 and β, respectively. Our photometric data are also compared to the UBV photometry and spectral indices from the HK survey; satisfactory agreement is found indicating good quality for the two data sets. The stars are classified in reddening-free diagrams of the uvby-β system; several of the stars are found to have been mis-classified in the HK survey. Two metal-poor supergiants, three (possibly four) horizontal branch stars, one blue subluminous star and two stars with ambiguous photometry have been identified. Stellar parameters, such as E(b − y), MV , δMV , and Teff, plus error estimates for these parameters, are provided using our photometric calibrations. Although all stars have galactic latitudes |b| ≥ 30 • many of them are significantly reddened with E(b − y) ranging from 0.02 to 0.15. The average reddening towards the South Galactic Pole region, b < −60 • , is E(b − y) = 0.027 ± 0.004 corresponding to E(B − V) = 0.036 ± 0.005 in contrast to the low value of E(B − V) 0.01 derived from the Burstein & Heiles (1982) maps. The stars are analyzed in the (b − y)0, [Fe/H] diagram, and individual ages estimated using the isochrones of VandenBerg & Bell (1985) and of Bergbusch & VandenBerg (1992). These very metal-poor stars are found to be coeval, within 1−2 Gyr, with the halo and thick-disk stars studied previously, with a mean age in excess of 18 Gyr. Several blue "thick-disk" stars, which are perhaps analogous to the "blue metal-poor" stars of Preston et al. (1994), have been identified.
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