AAS 200th meeting, Albuquerque, NM, June 2002
Session 46. Astrophysics in the Local Group
Display, Tuesday, June 4, 2002, 10:00am-6:30pm, SW Exhibit Hall

[Previous] | [Session 46] | [Next]


[46.05] A UBVR CCD Survey of the Magellanic Clouds

P. Massey (Lowell Observatory)

We present photometry and a preliminary interpretation of a UBVR survey of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, which covers 14.5 deg2 and 7.2 deg2, respectively. This study is aimed at obtaining well-calibrated data on the brighter, massive stars, complementing recent, deeper CCD surveys. Our catalog contains 179,655 LMC and 84,995 SMC stars brighter than V~18.0, and is photometrically complete to U~B~V~15.7, and R~15.2, although stars in crowded regions are selectively missed. We compare our photometry to that of others, and describe the need for gravity-dependent corrections to our CCD U-band photometry. We provide preliminary cross-reference between our catalog stars and the stars with existing spectroscopy. We discuss the population of stars seen towards the two Clouds, identifying the features in the color-magnitude diagram, and using existing spectroscopy to help construct H-R diagrams. We derive improved values for the blue to red star ratios in the two Clouds, emphasizing the uncertainties involved in this before additional spectroscopy. We compare the relative number of RSGs and Wolf-Rayet stars in the LMC and SMC with that of other galaxies in the Local Group, demonstrating a very strong, tight trend with metallicity, with the ratio changing by a factor of 160 from the SMC to M31. We also re-investigate the initial mass function of the massive stars found outside of the OB associations. With the newer data, we find that the IMF slope of this field population is very steep, with \Gamma~-4±.5, in agreement with our earlier work. This is in sharp contrast to the IMF slope found for the massive stars with OB associations (\Gamma~-1.3). Although much more spectroscopy is needed to make this result firm, incompleteness can no longer be invoked as an explanation.

This work has been funded in part by NSF Grant 0093060.


If you would like more information about this abstract, please follow the link to ftp://ftp.lowell.edu/mcatlasrev.ps.gz. This link was provided by the author. When you follow it, you will leave the Web site for this meeting; to return, you should use the Back comand on your browser.

[Previous] | [Session 46] | [Next]

Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, 34
© 2002. The American Astronomical Soceity.