Stellar Population
Joachim Köppen Kiel Dec 2018
Some brief explanations
The luminous matter in the Universe is organized in galaxies
which consist of stars and interstellar gas. The stars have
been born at various times in the past from the gas by
cold molecular clouds becoming unstable against their own
gravity. Nearly all the optical brightness of a galaxy comes
from the present stellar population which thus may be a combination
of young and old, hot and cool stars. From theoretical work,
it is fairly well known how stars of the various masses change
with time, so it is possible to model a population of stars,
in order to find out how star formation occurred in the past.
Because star formation is something we still cannot derive
from basic physics, one describes this process by assuming
that stars are born following a certain distribution
Function of their Initial Masses (the
IMF, usually decreasing like a power law with increasing
mass), and that the star formation rate (SFR) describes
how much gaseous matter is converted per time unit into any kind
of stars. The evolution of the new stars depends on the metallicity
of the gas out of which they were formed.
This tool permits the user to compute the theoretical and
observable properties of single stars of any mass and age and
various metallicities. It also permits to create synthetic
populations of stars born with any arbitrary history star formation.
There are three principal pages:
- Stars & Evolution: Here one can explore how the properties of a single star,
such as its temperature, luminosity, and photometric colours change with its
mass, age, and metallicity. For a given stellar mass the evolutionary tracks
can be displayed, as well as for a given age the isochrone curves can be plotted.
- Star Formation History: Here the user specifies how the star formation
rate changes with age, and also gives other parameters necessary for the simulation
of a stellar population.
- Synthetic Population: computes the properties of the stars of such a
simulated population, based on the user-defined star formation history. It displays
the data in a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram or Colour-Magnitude diagrams.
The theoretical evolutionary tracks of stars between 0.8 and 120 solar masses are
from the computations of the Geneva group
(C.Charbonnel, A.Maeder, G.Meynet, D.Schaerer, G.Schaller (1992ff) Astron.Astrophys.Suppl.
96, 296; 98, 523; 101, 415; 102, 339).
The tables for the photometric colours in the Johnson UBV system were computed
by G.Lapierre (Strasbourg) with
the Kurucz' grid of theoretical stellar spectra.
The controls on the
Stars & Evolution page are:
- Metallicity: specifies the abundance of the elements heavier than helium
(AKA 'metals') in the gas matter of the star. The quantity Z is the mass fraction
of these elements. Solar composition is Z=0.02. A choice of 5 values are given,
from metal-poor stars (Z=0.001) to twice solar composition (Z=0.04).
- stellar Mass: the user specifies the mass of the star at the beginning
of its life on the main sequence.
- Evolutionary Track: a click will plot the evolutionary track (as a black
curve) of the
star with the given mass, from the start on the main sequence to the end of
the evolution on the red giant branch.
- age: the user gives the age of the star, i.e. the time since the star
started on the main sequence.
- Isochrone: a click plots in any diagram the location of stars of all
masses but of the same age, as a red curve.
- Star: a click plots the position of the star with given mass and age,
as a small blue dot.
- Teff and log(L/Lsun): are the effective temperature and
luminosity of the displayed star.
- clear: wipes all curves on this plot. Note that each click of the
buttons adds the corresponding curve to the plot.
- X-axis, Y-axis: chooses the two parameters for the plot:
- effective temperature
- luminosity
- mass
- radius
- surface gravity
- age (linear scale), age (log scale)
- U, B, V: absolute brightness in the bands of about 365, 440, and 548 nm wavelength.
- U-B, B-V: the colour indices
- mU, mB, mV: apparent brightness in the bands of
about 365, 440, and 548 nm wavelength.
- mU-mB, mB-mV
- Set range: enter the values for the range to be displayed, then click the
radio button, to show the plot with the requested ranges. Avoid entering 0 or
a negative value when the parameter is a logarithmic quantity.
- Mouse position: displays the coordinates of the present
position of the mouse.
The controls on the
Star Formation History page are:
- Metallicity: specifies the abundance of the elements heavier than helium
(AKA 'metals') in the gas matter of the star. The quantity Z is the mass fraction
of these elements. Solar composition is Z=0.02. A choice of 5 values are given,
from metal-poor stars (Z=0.001) to twice solar composition (Z=0.04).
This choice is always consistent with the same control on the Stars & Evolution
page.
- IMF slope: is the exponent of the Initial Mass Function, i.e. the
distribution of the stellar masses at their beginning on the main sequence.
Here we use a simple power law, with the exponent 1.35 being approximately
appropriate for the Milky Way.
- E(B-V): specify the colour excess to take into account the interstellar
reddening towards an observed object. Otherwise, use 0
- distance, distance modulus: specify either value when you want to
compare simulation results with observational data. Click on the field
to make it input (light green colour), enter the value and hit the Enter key.
The other value then is computed and displayed.
- clear SFH: clears this plot and also any previously entered history.
- start input: click this, so that you can click on the plot to graphically
enter a history. Each click adds a blue dot to the plot, joined with a straight
blue line to the previous dot. To move a dot, click on it and drag it to the
desired position. A series of blue circles will trace the path, but will disappear
when the dot is released at the new position.
Note: when a dot is placed or moved to a negative values of the SFH, it will
be set to zero, i.e. no star formation.
Note: the SFH is taken constant before the first dot and after the last dot.
- end input: click this to exit the input mode and to display the final
version of the entered SFH.
- X-axis: one may choose between a linear or logarithmic scale for the age
- Set range: enter the values for the range to be displayed, then click the
radio button, to show the plot with the requested ranges. Avoid entering 0 or
a negative value when the parameter is a logarithmic quantity.
- Mouse position: displays the coordinates of the present
position of the mouse.
The controls on the
Synthetic Population page are:
- dot color: chooses the colour of the dots which represent a star in the plot.
- stars/batch: is the number of stars generated by each call of the simulator
section. If one wants to see quickly the results for a large number of stars, one
may choose a high number (However, with a huge population, a few computational
artefacts caused by e.g. the interpolation of data become more visible ... do not
overinterpret the presence of such fine features!)
- stars done: displays the total number of stars generated so far.
- clear: wipes the plot
- clear+start: starts a new simulation, clearing all previous results.
- stop: halts the current simulation.
- resume: continues with the simulation. Note that any changes in the
parameters (metallicity, IMF, star formation history, ...) are taken into
account. In this manner, one may create a mixture of populations of stars
with different SFHs.
- X-axis, Y-axis: chooses the two parameters for the plot, as on the
Stars & Evolution page. Note that when changing parameters, the plot is wiped,
and one simply repeats the simulation.
- Set range: enter the values for the range to be displayed, then click the
radio button, to show the plot with the requested ranges. Avoid entering 0 or
a negative value when the parameter is a logarithmic quantity.
- M/LB and M/LV: display the ratio of stellar
mass and luminosity in the B- and V-band of the entire stellar population.
- U-B, B-V: display the colour indices of the entire stellar
population.
- Mouse position: displays the coordinates of the present
position of the mouse.
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