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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We present images of a 40 pc region of the 30 Doradus nebula centered about 1 arcminute north of the luminous star cluster R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The region was imaged with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field Camera through H alpha, (S II), and stellar continuum filters. These data allow us to examine this region of star formation and the breakup of the cloud around R136 on a scale of 0.027 pc per pixel. We also present a complementary ground-based echelle spectrum of the H alpha and (N II) emission lines in this region. In the images one sees an extensive filamentary structure surrounding regions that have been hollowed out by R136 and other massive stars in the area. The (S II) image shows a sharper, more filamentary appearance than the H alpha image, and the filaments are offset in (S II) generally away from R136. These characteristics are indicative of ionization fronts that are outlining the neutral material and dust features. We also find fingers of enhanced (S II) emission located about 90 sec to the northwest of R136. The (S II) fingers appear to be readiating generally from a common region, and we suggest that they are composed of material ablated from the high density gas of the ionization fronts and entrained with the flow of the stellar winds from R136. We find that a small knot of emission resolves into two shells of about 0.5 pc diameter, each of which encircles one or two stars. One of the stars has been identified as an early main-sequence O star by Walborn & Blades (1987), and the shell could be a young wind-blown bubble. We also find a parabolic-shaped arc at the head of a long cone that opens up away from R136. The arc is located near a luminous candidate protostar identified by Hyland et al. (1992).
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X); 444; 2; p. 758-764
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We have observed a field in Baade's Window using the Wide Field Camera (WFC) of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and obtain V- and I-band photometry down to V approximately 22.5. These data go several magnitudes fainter than previously obtained from the ground. The location of the break in the luminosity function suggests that there are a significant number of intermediate age (less than 10 Gyr) stars in the Galactic bulge. This conclusion rests on the assumptions that the extinction towards our field is similar to that seen in other parts of Baade's Window, that the distance to the bulge is approximately 8 kpc, and that we can determine fairly accurate zero points for the HST photometry. Changes in any one of these assumptions could increase the inferred age, but a conspiracy of lower reddening, a shorter distance to the bulge, and/or photometric zero-point errors would be needed to imply a population entirely older than 10 Gyr. We infer an initial mass function slope for the main-sequence stars, and find that it is consistent with that measured in the solar neighborhood; unfortunately, the slope is poorly constrained because we sample only a narrow range of stellar mass and because of uncertainties in the observed luminosity function at the faint end.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 106; 5; p. 1826-1838
    Format: text
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