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Complexity on small scales: II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy

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Complexity on small scales: II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy. / Koch, Andreas; Grebel, Eva K.; Kleyna, Jan et al.
In: The Astronomical Journal, Vol. 133, No. 1, 01.2007, p. 270-283.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Koch, A, Grebel, EK, Kleyna, J, Wilkinson, MI, Harbeck, D, Gilmore, G, Wyse, RFG & Wyn Evans, N 2007, 'Complexity on small scales: II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy', The Astronomical Journal, vol. 133, no. 1, pp. 270-283. https://doi.org/10.1086/509889

APA

Koch, A., Grebel, E. K., Kleyna, J., Wilkinson, M. I., Harbeck, D., Gilmore, G., Wyse, R. F. G., & Wyn Evans, N. (2007). Complexity on small scales: II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy. The Astronomical Journal, 133(1), 270-283. https://doi.org/10.1086/509889

Vancouver

Koch A, Grebel EK, Kleyna J, Wilkinson MI, Harbeck D, Gilmore G et al. Complexity on small scales: II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy. The Astronomical Journal. 2007 Jan;133(1):270-283. doi: 10.1086/509889

Author

Koch, Andreas ; Grebel, Eva K. ; Kleyna, Jan et al. / Complexity on small scales : II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy. In: The Astronomical Journal. 2007 ; Vol. 133, No. 1. pp. 270-283.

Bibtex

@article{556a8a44c92a41248003ac4c07b3c9c9,
title = "Complexity on small scales: II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy",
abstract = "We present metallicities and ages for 52 red giants in the remote Galactic dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy Leo II. These stars cover the entire surface area of Leo II and are radial velocity members. We obtained medium-resolution multifiber spectroscopy with FLAMES as part of a Large Program with the Very Large Telescope at the European Southern Observatory, Chile. The metallicities were determined based on the well-established near-infrared Ca II triplet technique. This allowed us to achieve a mean random error of 0.16 dex on the metallicities, while other systematic effects, such as unknown variations in the dSph's [Ca/Fe] ratio, may introduce a further source of uncertainty of the order of 0.1 dex. The resulting metallicity distribution is asymmetric and peaks at [Fe/H] = -1.74 dex on the Carretta & Gratton scale. The full range in metallicities extends from -2.4 to -1.08 dex. As in other dSph galaxies, no extremely metal-poor red giants were found. We compare Leo II's observed metallicity distribution with model predictions for several other Galactic dSphs from the literature. Leo II clearly exhibits a lack of more metal-poor stars, analogous to the classical G dwarf problem, which may indicate a comparable {"}K giant problem.{"} Moreover, its evolution appears to have been affected by galactic winds. We use our inferred metallicities as an input parameter for isochrone fits to Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry of our target stars and derive approximate ages. The resulting age-metallicity distribution covers the full age range from 2 to about 15 Gyr on our adopted isochrone scale. During the first ~7 Gyr relative to the oldest stars, the metallicity of Leo II appears to have remained almost constant, centering on the mean metallicity of this galaxy. The almost constant metallicity at higher ages and a slight drop by about 0.3 dex thereafter may be indicative of rejuvenation by low-metallicity gas. Overall, the age-metallicity relation appears to support the formation of Leo II from preenriched gas. Evidence for enrichment is seen during the recent 2-4 Gyr. Our findings support earlier derived photometric findings of Leo II as a galaxy with a prominent old population and dominant intermediate-age populations. We do not see a significant indication of a radial metallicity gradient or age gradient in our current data.",
author = "Andreas Koch and Grebel, {Eva K.} and Jan Kleyna and Wilkinson, {Mark I.} and Daniel Harbeck and Gerard Gilmore and Wyse, {Rosemary F. G.} and {Wyn Evans}, N.",
year = "2007",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1086/509889",
language = "English",
volume = "133",
pages = "270--283",
journal = "The Astronomical Journal",
issn = "0004-6256",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Complexity on small scales

T2 - II. Metallicities and ages in the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy

AU - Koch, Andreas

AU - Grebel, Eva K.

AU - Kleyna, Jan

AU - Wilkinson, Mark I.

AU - Harbeck, Daniel

AU - Gilmore, Gerard

AU - Wyse, Rosemary F. G.

AU - Wyn Evans, N.

PY - 2007/1

Y1 - 2007/1

N2 - We present metallicities and ages for 52 red giants in the remote Galactic dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy Leo II. These stars cover the entire surface area of Leo II and are radial velocity members. We obtained medium-resolution multifiber spectroscopy with FLAMES as part of a Large Program with the Very Large Telescope at the European Southern Observatory, Chile. The metallicities were determined based on the well-established near-infrared Ca II triplet technique. This allowed us to achieve a mean random error of 0.16 dex on the metallicities, while other systematic effects, such as unknown variations in the dSph's [Ca/Fe] ratio, may introduce a further source of uncertainty of the order of 0.1 dex. The resulting metallicity distribution is asymmetric and peaks at [Fe/H] = -1.74 dex on the Carretta & Gratton scale. The full range in metallicities extends from -2.4 to -1.08 dex. As in other dSph galaxies, no extremely metal-poor red giants were found. We compare Leo II's observed metallicity distribution with model predictions for several other Galactic dSphs from the literature. Leo II clearly exhibits a lack of more metal-poor stars, analogous to the classical G dwarf problem, which may indicate a comparable "K giant problem." Moreover, its evolution appears to have been affected by galactic winds. We use our inferred metallicities as an input parameter for isochrone fits to Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry of our target stars and derive approximate ages. The resulting age-metallicity distribution covers the full age range from 2 to about 15 Gyr on our adopted isochrone scale. During the first ~7 Gyr relative to the oldest stars, the metallicity of Leo II appears to have remained almost constant, centering on the mean metallicity of this galaxy. The almost constant metallicity at higher ages and a slight drop by about 0.3 dex thereafter may be indicative of rejuvenation by low-metallicity gas. Overall, the age-metallicity relation appears to support the formation of Leo II from preenriched gas. Evidence for enrichment is seen during the recent 2-4 Gyr. Our findings support earlier derived photometric findings of Leo II as a galaxy with a prominent old population and dominant intermediate-age populations. We do not see a significant indication of a radial metallicity gradient or age gradient in our current data.

AB - We present metallicities and ages for 52 red giants in the remote Galactic dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy Leo II. These stars cover the entire surface area of Leo II and are radial velocity members. We obtained medium-resolution multifiber spectroscopy with FLAMES as part of a Large Program with the Very Large Telescope at the European Southern Observatory, Chile. The metallicities were determined based on the well-established near-infrared Ca II triplet technique. This allowed us to achieve a mean random error of 0.16 dex on the metallicities, while other systematic effects, such as unknown variations in the dSph's [Ca/Fe] ratio, may introduce a further source of uncertainty of the order of 0.1 dex. The resulting metallicity distribution is asymmetric and peaks at [Fe/H] = -1.74 dex on the Carretta & Gratton scale. The full range in metallicities extends from -2.4 to -1.08 dex. As in other dSph galaxies, no extremely metal-poor red giants were found. We compare Leo II's observed metallicity distribution with model predictions for several other Galactic dSphs from the literature. Leo II clearly exhibits a lack of more metal-poor stars, analogous to the classical G dwarf problem, which may indicate a comparable "K giant problem." Moreover, its evolution appears to have been affected by galactic winds. We use our inferred metallicities as an input parameter for isochrone fits to Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry of our target stars and derive approximate ages. The resulting age-metallicity distribution covers the full age range from 2 to about 15 Gyr on our adopted isochrone scale. During the first ~7 Gyr relative to the oldest stars, the metallicity of Leo II appears to have remained almost constant, centering on the mean metallicity of this galaxy. The almost constant metallicity at higher ages and a slight drop by about 0.3 dex thereafter may be indicative of rejuvenation by low-metallicity gas. Overall, the age-metallicity relation appears to support the formation of Leo II from preenriched gas. Evidence for enrichment is seen during the recent 2-4 Gyr. Our findings support earlier derived photometric findings of Leo II as a galaxy with a prominent old population and dominant intermediate-age populations. We do not see a significant indication of a radial metallicity gradient or age gradient in our current data.

U2 - 10.1086/509889

DO - 10.1086/509889

M3 - Journal article

VL - 133

SP - 270

EP - 283

JO - The Astronomical Journal

JF - The Astronomical Journal

SN - 0004-6256

IS - 1

ER -