Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Star Clusters in the Galactic Center Donald F. Figer STScI Sgr A* at 30 Workshop Green Bank W.Va March 25, 26, 2004 Collaborators Massive Stars Paco Najarro, CSIC Tom Geballe, Gemini Rolf Kudritzki, UH IMF Andrea Stolte, UF Pavel Kroupa, U. Kiel Carsten Weidner, U. Kiel Stellar Velocities Mark Morris, UCLA Eric Becklin, UCLA Ian McLean, UCLA Cluster Dynamics Sungsoo Kim, KHU Star Formation History in GC Mike Rich, UCLA Gene Serabyn, JPL Science Questions • • • • • • • • • What is the most massive star that can form? Is the IMF universal? What is the evolutionary sequence for massive stars? What causes massive stars to "erupt"? What is the star formation history of the Galactic Center? How do super-star clusters form? How do super-star clusters affect their environments? What is the dynamical evolution of massive clusters? What is the connection between nuclear star formation and massive central black holes? GC Young Star Geography 60 pc 20 cm N E Yusef-Zadeh, Morris, Chance 1984; Lang, Morris, Echevarria 1999 Galactic Center: Extinction K band 60 pc V band N E Digitized Sky Survey Figer 1995 Galactic Center Clusters N 1 pc E Pistol Star Central Cluster Quintuplet Cluster Arches Cluster The Central Cluster Schoedel et al. 2002; Genzel et al. 2003 Central cluster: Massive Stars Genzel et al. 2000; Krabbe et al. 1991, 1995 Central cluster: High Resolution Spectra Figer et al. 2004, in prep. Central cluster: Radial Velocities Figer et al. 2003 Radial Velocity Project Radial Velocity Project Arches Cluster Lick 3-m Figer 1995, PhD Thesis Arches Cluster Keck I 10-m Serabyn, Shupe, & Figer Nature 1998, 394, 448 Arches Cluster HST/NICMOS Figer et al. 1999, ApJ. 525, 750 Arches Cluster VLT NAOS/CONICA Stolte, A. 2003, PhD Thesis, University of Heidelberg 19” = 0.75 pc Arches Cluster: P-alpha see also: Nagata et al.1995 Cotera et al.1996 Blum et al. 2001 Figer et al. 2002, ApJ, 581, 258 NIII NIII HeII HeI/HI NIII HeI HeI Arches stars: WN9 stars Figer et al. 2002, ApJ, 581, 258 Arches stars: O stars HI HeI 68 27 Figer et al. 2002, ApJ, 581, 258 Arches Cluster Mass Function HST/NICMOS VLT/NAOS/CONICA Stolte et al. 2002 Arches Cluster: Mass Segregation Figer et al. 1999, ApJ, 525, 750 Arches Cluster: Upper Mass Cutoff Evidence for an upper mass cutoff to the IMF 1000 M! >20 stars Figer 2003, IAU 212 Quintuplet cluster Quintuplet cluster: Massive Stars Figer, Najarro, & Kudritzki 2004, in prep. Quintuplet-proper Members: DWCLs? L~104.6 L T~700 K R~250 AU WR Movie from Monnier, Tuthill, & Danchi 2002, ApJ, 567, L137 WC stars Figer et al. 1999, ApJ, 525, 759 Pistol Star: Estimating the Luminosity • Observing on the Rayleigh-Jeans tail: Can we guess the animal by observing its tail? +l 1 um Pistol Star: Estimating the Luminosity +l Beware! 1 um Pistol Star: Spectrum Figer et al. 1999, ApJ, 525, 759 Pistol Star: Mass JHKLMN + D.M. + temperature Lum. + model 2 Myr Lum. Mass tracks by Langer Figer et al. 1998, ApJ, 506, 384 LBVs in the Quintuplet • Both the Pistol Star and FMM362 are Luminous, Blue, and Variable Pistol Star FMM362 Figer et al. 1999, ApJ, 525, 759 Geballe et al. 2000, ApJ, 530, 97 LBV 1806-20 • Claim • 1-7 LPistol • 150-1000 Msun • Primary uncertainties • distance • temperature • singularity • Figer, Najarro, Kudritzki • in prep • R=22000 1.5-4.2 um • NIRSPEC/Keck LBV 1806-20 is a binary? Figer, Najarro, Kudritzki 2004, in prep. Massive Stars in GC Quintuplet Arches Center Other Total Galaxy red is estimate WC 11 0 15 2 28 101 WN LBV 5 6 15 2 28 2 0 5 0 7 O 100 160 100 ? 360 134 13 ? RSG 1 0 2 ? 3 ? Star Formation History in the GC Figer et al. 2004, ApJ, 601, 319 Conclusions • Massive GC clusters continuously likely form, disperse, and populate the region. • Most massive/compact young clusters in the Galaxy are in the GC • IMF is flat (at least in one cluster), and upper mass cutoff might be observed • The Pistol Star and FMM362 are amongst the most massive stars in the Galaxy