4.7 Article

Using the CaII triplet to trace abundance variations in individual red giant branch stars in three nearby galaxies

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 327, Issue 3, Pages 918-938

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-8711.2001.04785.x

Keywords

galaxies : individual : Sculptor; galaxies : individual : Fornax; galaxies : individual : NGC 6822; galaxies : kinematics and dynamics; Local Group; infrared : galaxies

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Spectroscopic abundance determinations for stars spanning a Hubble time in age are necessary in order to determine unambiguously the evolutionary histories of galaxies. Using FORS I in multi-object spectroscopy mode on ANTU (UT1) at the ESO VLT on Paranal, we have obtained near-infrared spectra from which we have measured the equivalent widths of the two strongest Ca II triplet lines to determine metal abundances for a sample of red giant branch stars, selected from ESO NTT optical (I, V - I) photometry of three nearby Local Group galaxies: the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal, the Fornax dwarf spheroidal and the dwarf irregular NGC 6822. The summed equivalent width of the two strongest lines in the Ca it triplet absorption-line feature, centred at 8500 Angstrom, can be readily converted into an [Fe/H] abundance using the previously established calibrations by Armandroff & Da Costa and Rutledge, Hesser & Stetson. We have measured metallicities for 37 stars in Sculptor, 32 stars in Fornax and 23 stars in NGC 6822, yielding more precise estimates of the metallicity distribution functions for these galaxies than it is possible to obtain photometrically. In the case of NGC 6822, this is the first direct measurement of the abundances of the intermediate-age and old stellar populations. We find metallicity spreads in each galaxy which are broadly consistent with the photometric width of the red giant branch, although the abundances of individual stars do not always appear to correspond to their colour. This is almost certainly predominantly due to a highly variable star formation rate with time in these galaxies, which results in a non-uniform, non-globular-cluster-like evolution of the Ca/Fe ratio.

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