Calendar

Ott
23
gio
Seminario: Ileana Chinnici (INAF-OAPa)
Ott 23@15:00–17:00

Titolo: “Da Piazzi in poi: oltre duecento anni di attività dell’Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo”

Abstract: Saranno esaminati i principali contributi scientifici dati dall’Osservatorio di Palermo allo sviluppo dell’astronomia nel corso della sua pluricentenaria attività scientifica, soffermandosi sui periodi più significativi e sui fattori che hanno determinato gli importanti risultati scientifici ottenuti, dalla fine del Settecento agli ultimi decenni del secolo scorso, dagli astronomi in forze all’Osservatorio.

Ott
27
lun
Corso 3 antincendio
Ott 27@14:00–19:00
Ott
28
mar
Riunione LSST Discovery Alliance
Ott 28@11:00–12:00
Corso 1 antincendio
Ott 28@14:00–18:00
Ott
29
mer
Corso 1 antincendio
Ott 29@14:00–18:00
Ott
31
ven
Lezione Corso: “Magnetohydrodynamics in Astrophysical Processes”
Ott 31@9:00–12:00
Nov
4
mar
Corso di primo soccorso
Nov 4@8:30–14:30
Nov
5
mer
Corso 2 antincendio
Nov 5@8:30–14:30
Nov
6
gio
Lezione Corso: “Magnetohydrodynamics in Astrophysical Processes”
Nov 6@9:00–12:00
Seminario: Maria Messineo (UniBo)
Nov 6@15:00–17:00

Titolo: Bright late-type stars in the thin Disk of the Milky Way

 

Abstract: Red supergiants (RSGs) and asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars are the
brightest sources at infrared wavelengths, detectable at a distance
of a few  megaparsecs —- even in heavily obscured galactic centers.
Through winds and mass loss, they enrich and sculpt the interstellar
medium.
Despite similar spectral energy distributions and apparent magnitudes,
RSGs and AGBs trace distinct spatial structures of a galaxy.
AGBs trace well the gravitational potential, including the central bar,
and span ages from 50 Myr to a Hubble time. RSGs, aged 4.5–40 Myr, decorate
the spiral arms, the central molecular disk, and the bar’s endpoints.
The Milky Way offers the nearest laboratory for resolved stellar
populations
in a barred galaxy, however, dust obscuration and distance uncertainties
hinder
clean separation of RSGs and AGBs -— a critical step for mapping Disk
structure
and star-formation history.
Over the past several years, I have developed methods to estimate
extinction
by partitioning interstellar and circumstellar components, to obtain better
luminosity and to distinguish RSGs from AGBs. I will highlight key
challenges
and solutions, including extinction-free colors as interstellar
extinction proxies,
GLIMPSE color–color diagrams, and Gaia–2MASS criteria.
Finally, I will present a new Gaia catalog of ~700 bona fide optical RSGs,
detailing its construction, temperature, and luminosity characterization.