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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Determination of Stellar Parameters through the Use of All Available Flux Data and Model Spectral Energy Distributions

Ekanayake, Gemunu 01 January 2017 (has links)
Basic stellar atmospheric parameters, such as effective temperature, surface gravity, and metallicity plays a vital role in the characterization of various stellar populations in the Milky Way. The Stellar parameters can be measured by adopting one or more observational techniques, such as spectroscopy, photometry, interferometry, etc. Finding new and innovative ways to combine these observational data to derive reliable stellar parameters and to use them to characterize some of the stellar populations in our galaxy is the main goal of this thesis. Our initial work, based on the spectroscopic and photometric data available in literature, had the objective of calibrating the stellar parameters from a range of available flux observations from far-UV to far-IR. Much effort has been made to estimate probability distributions of the stellar parameters using Bayesian inference, rather than point estimates. We applied these techniques to blue straggler stars (BSSs) in the galactic field, which are thought to be a product of mass transfer mechanism associated with binary stars. Using photometry available in SDSS and GALEX surveys we identified 85 stars with UV excess in their spectral energy distribution (SED) : indication of a hot white dwarf companion to BSS. To determine the parameter distributions (mass, temperature and age) of the WD companions, we developed algorithms that could fit binary model atmospheres to the observed SED. The WD mass distribution peaks at 0.4M , suggests the primary formation channel of field BSSs is Case-B mass transfer, i.e. when the donor star is in red giant phase of its evolution. Based on stellar evolutionary models, we estimate the lower limit of binary mass transfer efficiency β ~ 0.5. Next, we have focused on the Canis Major overdensity (CMO), a substructure located at low galactic latitude in the Milky Way, where the interstellar reddening (E(B-V )) due to dust is significantly high. In this study we estimated the reddening, metallicity distribution and kinematics of the CMO using a sample of red clump (RC) stars. The averageE(B-V)(~0.19)is consistent with that measured from Schlegel maps (Schlegal et.al. 1998). The overall metallicity and kinematic distribution is in agreement with the previous estimates of the disk stars. But the measured mean alpha element abundance is relatively larger with respect to the expected value for disk stars.
2

The Physics of Mergers: Theoretical and Statistical Techniques Applied to Stellar Mergers in Dense Star Clusters

Leigh, William Nathan 10 1900 (has links)
<p>In this thesis, we present theoretical and statistical techniques broadly related to systems of dynamically-interacting particles. We apply these techniques to observations of dense star clusters in order to study gravitational interactions between stars. These include both long- and short-range interactions, as well as encounters leading to direct collisions and mergers. The latter have long been suspected to be an important formation channel for several curious types of stars whose origins are unknown. The former drive the structural evolution of star clusters and, by leading to their eventual dissolution and the subsequent dispersal of their stars throughout the Milky Way Galaxy, have played an important role in shaping its history. Within the last few decades, theoretical work has painted a comprehensive picture for the evolution of star clusters. And yet, we are still lacking direct observational confirmation that many of the processes thought to be driving this evolution are actually occuring. The results presented in this thesis have connected several of these processes to real observations of star clusters, in many cases for the first time. This has allowed us to directly link the observed properties of several stellar populations to the physical processes responsible for their origins.</p> <p>We present a new method of quantifying the frequency of encounters involving single, binary and triple stars using an adaptation of the classical mean free path approximation. With this technique, we have shown that dynamical encounters involving triple stars occur commonly in star clusters, and that they are likely to be an important dynamical channel for stellar mergers to occur. This is a new result that has important implications for the origins of several peculiar types of stars (and binary stars), in particular blue stragglers. We further present several new statistical techniques that are broadly applicable to systems of dynamically-interacting particles composed of several different types of populations. These are applied to observations of star clusters in order to obtain quantitative constraints for the degree to which dynamical interactions affect the relative sizes and spatial distributions of their different stellar populations. To this end, we perform an extensive analysis of a large sample of colour-magnitude diagrams taken from the ACS Survey for Globular Clusters. The results of this analysis can be summarized as follows: (1) We have compiled a homogeneous catalogue of stellar populations, including main-sequence, main-sequence turn-off, red giant branch, horizontal branch and blue straggler stars. (2) With this catalogue, we have quantified the effects of the cluster dynamics in determining the relative sizes and spatial distributions of these stellar populations. (3) These results are particularly interesting for blue stragglers since they provide compelling evidence that they are descended from binary stars. (4) Our analysis of the main-sequence populations is consistent with a remarkably universal initial stellar mass function in old massive star clusters in the Milky Way. This is a new result with important implications for our understanding of star formation in the early Universe and, more generally, the history of our Galaxy. Finally, we describe how the techniques presented in this thesis are ideally suited for application to a number of other outstanding puzzles of modern astrophysics, including chemical reactions in the interstellar medium and mergers between galaxies in galaxy clusters and groups.</p> / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
3

Spectroscopy of Binaries in Globular Clusters

Giesers, Benjamin David 13 December 2019 (has links)
No description available.

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