DISCLAIMER

This experiment is based on "Project 1: Colour-Maginitude Diagrams of Star Clusters" of The Open University and adapted to the setup as provided by the Campus Observatory Garching (COG). /!\ Is this enough?

General Introduction

/!\ This section should contain a general overview of astronomy (Stars, HRD, Star Clusters) and instrumentation (CCD, Mounting, Optics, Filters).

/!\ Errors and limitations (Seeing, Air mass, CCD-related errors,)

/!\ Section 1.3 Background, which covers the following topics: star clusters, astronomical magnitudes and colours.

As noted above, in this project you will obtain colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) of two/one /!\ open clusters and one globular cluster. Your aim will be to investigate the differences between the CMDs of these three/two /!\ clusters and explain these differences in terms of cluster ages.

/!\ You will also estimate the distances to the open clusters using the technique of main-sequence fitting.

>>> HRD Figure 1.1 <<<

A CMD plots the apparent magnitude of stars against their colour index, where an astronomical colour index is simply the difference between two magnitudes obtained through different filters. A CMD of a star is the observational analogue of a Hertzsprung-Russel diagram (HRD). On a HRD, absolute magnitude or luminosity is plotted increasing up the vertical axis (i.e. most luminous stars near the top) and spectral type or temperature increasing to the left is plotted on the horizontal axis (i.e. hottest stars on the left), as shown in Figure 1.1.

Hertzsprung-Russel diagrams and colour-magnitude diagrams are vital tools for understanding the evolution of stars and their composition. HRDs produced from theoretical calculations can be tested against observational HRDs to judge the accuracy of a particular theory. As you will see later, CMDs of star clusters can be used for distance determination purposes and also indicate the ages of different stellar populations.

Goals

The aim of this "advanced lab course" is to construct colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) for star clusters (open and globular clusters). The targets for the observation should be planned ahead of the observation. The analysis of the stellar clusters should reveal properties of the stellar population of the observed cluster. The analysis is conducted using a widely used, standard tool for image preocessing in astronomy, IRAF .

The objectives are: ( /!\ Maybe add some objectives)

Preperation

Before starting with the above objectives you should familiarise yourself with the important technical terms. You should be able to describe the telescope and its components, also the basics of data reduction should be known.

This project is concerned with stellar photometry - that is measuring the apparent magnitudes of stars through one or more astronomical filters. The targets of observation are star clusters, which means that many individual stars of interest (typically tens or hundreds of stars) will be contained within each target image that you obtain. As well as obtaining images of the clusters themselves you will need to obtain appropriate calibration frames to correct for the bias signal and dark current, and to carry out a flat-field-correction.

/!\ original version goes on as follows:

However, in this project you will not be asked to measure standard stars in order to determine the extinction coefficient /!\epsilon and zero-point offset /!\chi to calibrate magnitudes. Instead you will use a reference star of known magnitude in each target image, and determine the magnitudes of other stars relative to this reference point.

In order to determine extinction coefficient /!\epsilon and zero-point offset /!\chi to calibrate magnitudes, you will also observe a standard field. A standard field is a set of stars with known/tabulated absolute magnitudes.

The quickest part of this project is likely to be actually taking the images of the star clusters. Planning the observations, including which targets to observe when, which calibration frames to take, etc. and analysing the data, are each likely to take far longer. It is therefore vital to plan how your group will carry out thins project, including who will do what and when.

Observing

Analysis

Log on to your account on the Linux machine via VNC. The tutor should have copied the raw images to your working directory. As a first step it is useful to produce a local backup in case you need to start over.

INTERNAL_USE_ONLY_open_university_clusters.pdf