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Issue online:
05 Jun 2006

Accepted 2006 April 5. Received 2006 March 4; in original form 2005 July 19

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume 369 Issue 4 Page 1822-1836, July 2006

To cite this article: G. Maheswar, H. C. Bhatt (2006)
Photometric distances to nine dark globules
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 369 (4), 1822–1836.
doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10420.x

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Abstract

Photometric distances to nine dark globules

  • 1Indian Institute of Astrophysics, Sarjapur Road, Koramangala, Bangalore 560034, India2University of Calicut, Calicut, India3Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences, Nainital, India
E-mail: maheswar@aries.ernet.in (GM); hcbhatt@iiap.ernet.in (HCB)

ABSTRACT

 

Distances to nine dark globules are determined by a method using optical (VRI) and near-infrared (near-IR) (JHK) photometry of stars projected towards the field containing the globules. In this method, we compute intrinsic colour indices of stars projected towards the direction of the globule by dereddening the observed colour indices using various trial values of extinction AV and a standard extinction law. These computed intrinsic colour indices for each star are then compared with the intrinsic colour indices of normal main-sequence stars and a spectral type is assigned to the star for which the computed colour indices best match with the standard intrinsic colour indices. Distances (d) to the stars are determined using the AV and absolute magnitude (MV) corresponding to the spectral types thus obtained. A distance versus extinction plot is made and the distance at which AV undergoes a sharp rise is taken to be the distance to the globule. All the clouds studied in this work are in the distance range 160–400 pc. The estimated distances to dark globules LDN 544, LDN 549, LDN 567, LDN 543, LDN 1113, LDN 1031, LDN 1225, LDN 1252 and LDN 1257 are 180 ± 35, 200 ± 40, 180 ± 35, 160 ± 30, 350 ± 70, 200 ± 40, 400 ± 80, 250 ± 50 and 250 ± 50 pc, respectively. Using the distances determined, we have estimated the masses of the globules and the far-IR luminosity of the IRAS sources associated with them. The mass of the clouds studied are in the range 10–200 Mo.



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