SIMBAD references

2000AJ....119..705D - Astron. J., 119, 705-726 (2000/February-0)

The dwarf spheroidal companions to M31: WFPC2 observations of Andromeda II.

DA COSTA G.S., ARMANDROFF T.E., CALDWELL N. and SEITZER P.

Abstract (from CDS):

The Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 camera has been used to image Andromeda II, a dwarf spheroidal (dSph) companion to M31. The resulting color-magnitude (c-m) diagrams reveal the morphology of the horizontal branch (HB) in this dwarf galaxy. We find that like Andromeda I, and like most of the Galactic dSph companions, the HB morphology of And II is predominantly red. Unlike And I, however, there is no evidence for a radial gradient in HB morphology in the And II data. Based on a comparison with a combination of standard Galactic globular cluster c-m diagrams scaled to reproduce the And II mean abundance and abundance dispersion, we interpret the observed HB morphology of And II as indicating that at least 50% of the total stellar population is younger than the age of the globular clusters. This inference is strengthened by the small number of confirmed upper-AGB carbon stars in And II. The relatively faint luminosities (Mbol~-4.1) of these stars, however, suggest an age or ages nearer 6-9 Gyr, rather than 1-3 Gyr, for this population. On the other hand, the existence of blue HB and RR Lyrae variable stars in And II argues for the existence of an additional old (age>10 Gyr) population in this dSph. Thus, And II has had an extended epoch of star formation like many of the Galactic dSphs. The mean magnitude of the blue HB in And II suggests (m-M)0=24.17±0.06 and that And II is 125±60 kpc closer than M31 along the line of sight. This confirms the association of And II with M31, rather than with M33 to which And II lies closer on the sky. The true distance of And II from the center of M31 is between ∼160 and ∼230 kpc, comparable to the Galactocentric distances of Fornax and of the Leo dSphs. With the current samples of dSph companions, the size of the Galaxy's and M31's dSph satellite systems are comparable, with outer radii of order 250 kpc. The And II red giant branch colors yield a mean abundance of <[Fe/H]≥-1.49±0.11 and a surprisingly large internal abundance spread, which can be characterised by σint([Fe/H])~0.36 dex. Both these values are in good agreement with the recent ground-based spectroscopic study of Côté et al. The And II abundance dispersion found here is considerably larger than that derived for And I from an identical analysis of similar data (σint([Fe/H])=0.21 dex). Thus, despite having very similar luminosities and mean metal abundances, these two M31 dSph companions have clearly had different chemical evolution histories. We find that we cannot model the abundance distribution in And II with single component simple chemical enrichment models. However, we can reproduce the form of the distribution if we assume two components, each with a simple model abundance distribution. The ``metal-poor'' component has mean abundance log(<z>/zsun)=-1.6, while the ``metal-rich'' one has mean abundance log(<z>/zsun)=-0.95 and is outnumbered by the metal-poor population by a ratio of ∼2.3 to 1. We end by concluding that the diversity of evolutionary histories evident among the Galactic dSph companions is now also firmly established among the dSph satellites of M31. An Appendix discusses minor revisions to our earlier And I results that arise from the calibration and analysis techniques adopted in this paper. In particular, our comparisons with ground-based photometry indicate that the zero point for the WFPC2 F450W to B transformation should be modified, by 0.055 mag, to produce fainter B magnitudes and thus redder B-V colors.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Galaxies: Abundances - Galaxies: Dwarf - galaxies: individual (Andromeda I, Andromeda II) - Galaxies: Photometry - Galaxies: Stellar Content - Galaxies: Local Group

Simbad objects: 42

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