Three-Dimensional Distributions of Type II Cepheids and Anomalous Cepheids in the Magellanic Clouds. Do these Stars Belong to the Old, Young or Intermediate-Age Population?
P. Iwanek, I. Soszy\'nski, D. Skowron, J. Skowron, P. Mr\'oz, S., Koz{\l}owski, A. Udalski, M. K. Szyma\'nski, P. Pietrukowicz, R. Poleski, A., Jacyszyn-Dobrzeniecka

TL;DR
This study analyzes the three-dimensional spatial distributions of various Cepheid and RR Lyrae stars in the Magellanic Clouds to infer their ages and evolutionary histories, revealing that W Vir stars are likely a mix of old and intermediate-age stars.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed three-dimensional spatial analysis comparing type II and anomalous Cepheids with classical Cepheids and RR Lyrae stars in the Magellanic Clouds.
Findings
BL Her stars are as old as RR Lyrae stars, forming a vast halo.
W Vir stars show mixed characteristics of young and old populations.
Anomalous Cepheids differ significantly from classical Cepheids in distribution.
Abstract
The nature of type II Cepheids and anomalous Cepheids is still not well known and their evolutionary channels leave many unanswered questions. We use complete collection of classical pulsating stars in the Magellanic Clouds discovered by the OGLE project, to compare their spatial distributions, which are one of the characteristic features directly related to the star formation history. In this analysis we use 9649 classical Cepheids, 262 anomalous Cepheids, 338 type II Cepheids and 46 443 RR Lyr stars from both Magellanic Clouds. We compute three-dimensional Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests for every possible pair of type II and anomalous Cepheids with classical Cepheids, and RR Lyr stars. We confirm that BL Her stars are as old as RR Lyr variable stars - their spatial distributions are similar, and they create a vast halo around both galaxies. We discover that spatial distribution of W Vir…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Exploration and Technology
