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\lfoot{\it Magellanic Clouds Newsletter No. 79}
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%========================================================================
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\centerline{\darkframe{3}{10}{17cm}{
\centerline{\Huge\bf\sc \hfill The Magellanic Clouds Newsletter \hfill  }
\centerline{$\star \star \star$}
\centerline{\it\large An electronic exchange on Magellanic Clouds research}
\\
\\ \centerline{\bf Edited by\, Bryan C.\ Dunne} 
\\ \centerline{\bf Co-Editors\, Eva K.\ Grebel and You-Hua Chu}
\\
\\ \centerline{{\tt mcnews@astro.uiuc.edu}}
\\
\\ \centerline{{\tt http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/projects/mcnews/MCNews.php}}
\\ 
\\ {\Large\it{No.\ 79}} \hfill {\Large\it{December 16th, 2004}}}}

\bigskip
\bigskip



\begin{multicols}{2}
%========================================================================
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%   Letter From The Editor
%========================================================================
\centerline{
{\Large\bf{Letter From The Editor}}
}

\medskip

\noindent Dear Colleagues,\\

\noindent The Magellanic Clouds Working Group is pleased to bring you 
issue 79 of the Magellanic Clouds Newsletter.  In this issue, we
present 6 submitted abstracts, an announcement for an upcoming meeting
on high energy sources in galaxies, an opportunity for students you
may be working with, and a collection of recent astro-ph listings of
potential interest to Magellanic Clouds researchers.  As always, this
month's issue is available from the MC News Website in a variety of
formats (PDF, HTML, PostScript, and \LaTeX).\\

\noindent Best Regards,\\
Bryan Dunne\\
Editor, MC News

\columnbreak

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%   Table of Contents
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\begin{center}
\lightframe{0.5}{5}{8cm}{
{\LARGE\sc{Contents}} 
\bigskip

6 Abstracts of Refereed Papers \dotfill\ 2 \\
1 Meeting Announcement \dotfill\ 6 \\
1 Student Opportunity \dotfill\ 7 \\
Recent astro-ph Listings \dotfill\ 8 \\}
\end{center}


\lightframe{0.5}{5}{8cm}{
\begin{center}
{\LARGE\sc{Upcoming Meeting Quicklist}} 
\end{center}
\bigskip
205th American Astronomical Society Meeting
\dotfill\ 9-13 January 2005
\medskip \\
Populations of High-Energy Sources in Galaxies
\dotfill\ 15-19 August 2005}



\end{multicols}

\newpage


%========================================================================
%========================================================================
%   Journal Papers
%========================================================================
\centerline{
{\LARGE\bf{Abstracts of Refereed Papers}}
}

\bigskip

\begin{center}
{\Large\bf Optical properties of SMC X-ray binaries
}\\ \bigskip
{\bf M.J.Coe, W.R.T.Edge, J.L.Galache and V.A.McBride
}\end{center}
{\footnotesize School of Physics \& Astronomy, University of Southampton, UK
}\\

This work represent the first major study of the optical and IR
characteristics of the mass donor companions to the X-ray pulsars in
the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC).  In this work several new
counterparts have been identified, and possible ones confirmed, as
companions to X-ray pulsars in the SMC giving a total of 34 such
objects now identified. In addition this work presents three new
binary periods and confirms two X-ray periods using optical data for
objects in this group. This homogeneous sample has been studied as a
group to determine important general characteristics that may offer
insight into the evolution of such systems. In particular, the
spectral class distribution shows a much greater agreement with those
of isolated Be stars, and appears to be in some disagreement with the
galactic population of Be stars in Be/X-ray binaries. Studies of the
long term optical modulation of the Be star companions reveal an
extremely variable group of objects, a fact which will almost
certainly make a major contribution to the pronounced X-ray
variability. The spatial distribution of these systems within the SMC
is investigated and strongly suggests a link between massive star
formation and the HI density distribution.  Finally, studies of the
circumstellar disk characteristics reveal a strong link with optical
variability offering important clues into the long-term stability of
such disks.\\

\noindent {\bf Comments:} Accepted for publication in MNRAS \\
{\bf WWW:} www.astro.soton.ac.uk/$\sim$mjc/oid.ps.gz \\
{\bf e-mail:} mjcoe@soton.ac.uk \\
\bigskip
%===============================================================


\begin{center}
{\Large\bf Near infrared imaging observations of the N159/N160 complex in the LMC: Large clusters of Herbig Ae/Be stars and sequential cluster formation
}\\ \bigskip
{\bf Yasushi Nakajima (1), Daisuke Kato (2), Tetsuya Nagata (3), Motohide Tamura (1), Shuji Sato (2), Koji Sugitani (4), Chie Nagashima (2), Takahiro Nagayama (3),  Ikuru Iwata (1), Yoshifusa Ita (5), Toshihiko Tanabe (6), Mikio Kurita (2), Hidehiko Nakaya (7) and Daisuke Baba (2)
}\end{center}
{\footnotesize (1) National Astronomical Observatory of Japan \\
(2) Department of Astrophysics, Nagoya University \\
(3) Department of Astronomy, Kyoto University \\
(4) Institute of Natural Sciences, Nagoya City University \\
(5) Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency \\
(6) Institute of Astronomy, The University of Tokyo \\
(7) Subaru Telescope, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan
}\\

We carried out deep near-infrared imaging observations of the
N159/N160 complex star forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud
(LMC). We observed an area of $\sim$ 380 arcmin$^2$ ($\sim$ 80,000
pc$^2$ at the distance of the LMC) in the $J$, $H$, and $Ks$
bands. The observations are deep enough to detect down to $\sim$ 3
M$_\odot$ Herbig Ae/Be stars in the LMC. We discovered a total of 338
and 464 candidates of Herbig Ae/Be and OB stars, respectively, based
on the near-infrared colors and magnitudes. The Herbig Ae/Be star
candidates constitute 10 clusters, while the OB star candidates 13. We
discovered an embedded Herbig Ae/Be cluster in the N159E giant
molecular cloud (GMC) and a Herbig Ae/Be cluster at a north-east tip
of the N159S GMC. Together with neighboring two H II regions, the
Herbig Ae/Be cluster at a tip of the N159S GMC indicates a hint of the
beginning of sequential cluster formation in N159S. Spatial
distributions of the Herbig Ae/Be and OB clusters, in conjunction with
previously known optical clusters and embedded massive stars, indicate
(1) sequential cluster formation within each of the N159 and N160 star
forming regions, and (2) large scale sequential cluster formation over
the entire observed region from N160 to N159S. Possible triggers for
the large scale sequential cluster formation are a supergiant shell
SGS19 and an expanding superbubble. Some Herbig Ae/Be clusters in the
N159/N160 complex are significantly larger in spatial scale than
pre-main sequence clusters of similar age in the Galaxy. Highly
turbulent gas motion in the LMC is probably responsible for forming
the large young clusters.\\

\noindent {\bf Comments:} accepted by the Astronomical Journal \\
{\bf WWW:} http://optik2.mtk.nao.ac.jp/$\sim$yas/preprint/preprint0410.pdf \\
{\bf e-mail:} yas@optik.mtk.nao.ac.jp \\
\bigskip
%===============================================================


\begin{center}
{\Large\bf The ultraviolet and optical spectra of luminous B-type stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud
}\\ \bigskip
{\bf C. Evans (1), D. Lennon (1), N. Walborn (2), C. Trundle (1,3), S. Rix (1)
}\end{center}
{\footnotesize (1) Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes, La Palma, Spain \\
(2) Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, MD \\
(3) Queen's Iniversity of Belfast, N. Ireland
}\\

We present ultraviolet spectra from the Space Telescope Imaging
Spectrograph (STIS) of 12 early B-type stars in the Small Magellanic
Cloud (SMC), comprising 9 supergiants and 3 giants.  A morphological
comparison with Galactic analogues is made using archival data from
the {\it International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE)}. In general, the
intensity of the P Cygni emission in the UV resonance lines is
greater, and seen to later spectral types, in the Galactic spectra
than in their metal-deficient SMC counterparts; we attribute these
effects as most likely arising from weaker stellar winds in the SMC
targets, as predicted by radiatively driven wind theory.  We also
include unpublished STIS observations of two late O-type stars in the
SMC.  In combination with the B-type observations, and published
O-type data, we now have an extensive ultraviolet spectral library of
metal-deficient stars, of use in the study of unresolved starbursts
and high redshift, star-forming galaxies.  In this context, we present
empirical measurements for the B-type spectra of the new `1978 index'
suggested by Rix et al. as a probe of metallicity in such systems.\\

\noindent {\bf Comments:} Accepted by PASP \\
{\bf WWW:} http://www.ing.iac.es/$\sim$cje/bstars.ps.gz \\
{\bf e-mail:} cje@ing.iac.es \\
\bigskip
%===============================================================


\begin{center}
{\Large\bf Surface Brightness and Stellar Populations at the Outer Edge of the Large Magellanic Cloud: No Stellar Halo Yet 
}\\ \bigskip
{\bf C. Gallart (1), P.B. Stetson (2), E. Hardy (3), F. Pont (5) and R. Zinn (5)
}\end{center}
{\footnotesize (1) Instituto de Astrof\'\i sica de Canarias, Canary Islands. Spain \\ 
(2) Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, Victoria, BC, Canada \\
(3) National Radio Astronomy Observatory and Astronomy Dept. Universidad de Chile Santiago,  Chile \\
(4) Observatoire de Gen\`eve, Sauverny, Switzerland \\
(5) Department of Astronomy, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
}\\

We present a high quality CMD for a 36' $\times$ 36' field located 8
degrees ($\simeq 7$ kpc) from the LMC center, as well as a precise
determination of the LMC surface brightness derived from the resolved
stellar population out to this large galactocentric radius. This deep
CMD shows for the first time the detailed age distribution at this
position, where the surface brightness is $V \simeq$ 26.5
mag/''$^2$. At a radius R$\simeq$ 474' the main sequence is well
populated from the oldest turnoff at $I \simeq 21.5$ to the 2.5 Gyr
turnoff at $I \simeq 19.5$. Beyond this radius, a relatively strong
gradient in the density of stars with ages in the $\simeq$ 2.5--4 Gyr
range is apparent. There are some stars brighter and bluer than the
main population, quite uniformly distributed over the whole area
surveyed, which are well matched by a 1.5 Gyr isochrone and may be
indicative of a relatively recent star formation, or merger,
event. The surface brightness profile of the LMC remains exponential
to this large galactocentric radius and shows no evidence of disk
truncation. Combining the information on surface brightness and
stellar population we conclude that the LMC disk extends (and
dominates over a possible stellar halo) out to a distance of at least
7 kpc. These results confirm that the absence of blue stars in the
relatively shallow off-center CMDs of dIrr galaxies is not necessarily
evidence for an exclusively old stellar population resembling the halo
of the Milky Way.\\

\noindent {\bf Comments:} Accepted by:	ApJ Letters: ApJ, 614, L109 \\
{\bf WWW:} http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/0409023 \\
{\bf e-mail:} carme@iac.es \\
\bigskip
%===============================================================

\newpage

\begin{center}
{\Large\bf Forty eclipsing binaries in the Small Magellanic Cloud: fundamental parameters and Cloud distance.
}\\ \bigskip
{\bf R.W.Hilditch (1), I.D.Howarth (2), and T.J.Harries (3)
}\end{center}
{\footnotesize (1) University of St Andrews, Scotland \\
(2) University College, London, England \\
(3) University of Exeter, England
}\\

We have conducted a programme to determine the fundamental parameters
of a substantial number of eclipsing binaries of spectral types O and
B in the Small Magellanic Cloud. New spectroscopic data, obtained with
the two-degree-field multi-object spectrograph on the 3.9-m
Anglo-Australian Telescope, have been used in conjunction with
photometry from the Optical Gravitational Lens Experiment (OGLE-II)
database of SMC eclipsing binaries. Previously we reported results for
10 systems; in this second and concluding paper we present spectral
types, masses, radii, temperatures, surface gravities and luminosities
for the components of a further 40 binaries. The full sample of 50
OB-type eclipsing systems is the largest single set of fundamental
parameters determined for high-mass binaries in any galaxy. We find
that 21 of the systems are in detached configurations, 28 are in
semi-detached post-mass-transfer states, and one is a contact binary.
Each system provides a primary distance indicator. We find a mean
distance modulus to the SMC of 18.91+/-0.03+/-0.1 (internal and
external uncertainties; D=60.6+/-1.0 kpc). This value represents one
of the most precise available determinations of the distance to the
SMC. \\

\noindent {\bf Comments:} paper accepted on 22 November 2004 for publication in MNRAS. \\
{\bf WWW:} astro-ph/0411672 \\
{\bf e-mail:} rwh@st-andrews.ac.uk \\
\bigskip
%===============================================================



\begin{center}
{\Large\bf            Evolutionary Stellar Population Synthesis at High  
Spectral Resolution: Optical Wavelengths.
}\\ \bigskip
{\bf       R. Gonz\'alez Delgado (1), M. Cervi\~no (1), L. Martins (2),  
C. Leitherer (2), and P.H. Hauschildt (3)
} \end{center}
{\footnotesize  (1) Instituto de Astrof\'{\i}sica de Andaluc\'{\i}a, Granada, Spain \\
(2) Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, MD, USA \\
(3) Hamburger Sternwarte, Hamburg, Germany
}\\

We present the single stellar population (SSP) synthesis results of
our new synthetic stellar atmosphere models library with a spectral
sampling of 0.3 \AA, covering the wavelength range from 3000 \AA ~to
7000\AA ~for a wide range of metallicities (twice solar, solar, half
and 1/10 solar). The stellar library is composed of 1650 spectra
computed with the latest improvements in stellar atmospheres. In
particular it incorporates non-LTE line-blanketed models for hot
(T$_{\mathrm{eff}}$ $\ge$ 27500 K) and LTE line-blanketed models
(Phoenix) for cool (3000 K $\le$ T$_{\mathrm{eff}}$ $\le$ 4500 K)
stars. Because of the high spectral resolution of this library,
evolutionary synthesis models can be used to predict the strength of
numerous weak absorption lines, and the evolution of the profiles of
the strongest lines over a wide range of ages. The SSP results have
been calculated for ages 1 Myr to 17 Gyr using the stellar
evolutionary provided by the Geneva and Padova-tracks groups. For
young stellar populations, our results have a very detailed coverage
of high-temperature stars with similar results for Padova and Geneva
isochrones. For intermediate and old stellar populations, our results,
once degraded to a lower resolution, are similar to the ones obtained
by other groups apart from limitations imposed by the stellar
evolutionary physics. The limitations and advantages of our library
for the analysis of integrated populations are described. The full set
of the stellar library and the evolutionary models are available here
for retrieval or on request from authors.  \\

\noindent {\bf Comments:} Accepted by:\,   M.N.R.A.S.
{\bf WWW:} http://www.iaa.es/$\sim$rosa/ \\
{\bf e-mail:} rosa@iaa.es, mcs@iaa.es \\
\\

%========================================================================
%========================================================================
%   Meeting Announcements
%========================================================================
\centerline{
{\LARGE\bf{Meeting Announcements}}
}

\bigskip

\begin{center}
{\Large\bf IAU Symposium No.230: 1st Announcement}
\end{center}

\noindent At its meeting in Mexico City on 25 May 2004, the Executive Committee
of the International Astronomical Union accepted the proposal for an
IAU Symposium on  "Populations of High-Energy Sources in Galaxies",
to be held 15-19 August 2005 in Dublin, Ireland. This will be IAU
Symposium No. 230. The venue will be Dublin Castle, in the centre of
town. \\

\noindent With currently operational high-energy satellite observatories the
potential for conducting detailed studies of individual sources of
high-energy radiation in other galaxies as well as in our own Milky Way
has greatly increased. \\

\noindent The primary objectives for this Symposium are:
\begin{itemize}
\item Overview of key source categories in our Galaxy (X-ray and gamma-ray, the latter notably referring to INTEGRAL results)
\item Review of the results on individual high-energy sources in galaxies that have been obtained with Chandra and XMM-Newton
\item Derivation of global descriptions of high-energy source populations in galaxies
\item Assessment of the evolutionary status of stellar populations, derived from the X-ray investigations
\item Discussion of the high-redshift context of the source populations
\end{itemize}

\noindent Information on IAU Symposium number 230 is available via
http://www.dunsink.dias.ie/IAUS230/index.html \\

\noindent The Scientific Organizing Committee is composed of: E.J.A. Meurs
(Ireland, Chair), G. Fabbiano (USA, Co-Chair), L. Bassani (Italy),
B. McBreen (Ireland), H.-Y. Chu (USA), C. Done (UK), G. Hasinger
(Germany), G. Koenigsberger (Mexico), K. Koyama (Japan), V. Lipunov
(Russia),M.Mas-Hesse (Spain), Th. Montmerle (France), G. Romero
(Argentina), Z. Wang (China). \\

\noindent The Local Organizing Committee consists of: B. McBreen (Chair), 
C. del Burgo, C. Handley, L. Norci, C. Melody, C.  Woods. \\

\noindent The anticipated time timetable is: \\
\begin{quotation}
\noindent October 2004 : 1st Announcement \\
15 December 2004 : deadline for pre-registration \\
January 2005 : 2nd Announcement \\
April 2005 : Final Announcement \\
1 June 2005 : Registration Deadline \\
15 August 2005 : Symposium programme starts\\
\end{quotation}

\noindent The purpose of the pre-registration is to gauge the interest in this
Symposium, so as to assist SOC and LOC with their organization.  The
2nd Announcement will contain the call for registration, information
about hotel reservations, abstract submission, posters, proceedings,
IAU travel grants, invited speakers and sponsorship. \\

\noindent Please circulate this 1st Announcement in your Institute or 
University Department and to colleagues elsewhere that may be
interested. We try to avoid this notice being sent more than once to
you, but occasionally your e-mail address might occur in more than one
of our mailing lists. \\

\noindent With best regards, \\
Evert Meurs and Pepi Fabbiano (SOC Co-Chairs) \\
Brian McBreen (LOC Chair) \\

\bigskip
%===============================================================


%========================================================================
%========================================================================
%   Student Opportunity
%========================================================================
\centerline{
{\LARGE\bf{Student Opportunity}}
}

\begin{center}
{\Large\bf Invitation for PhD Program Applications}
\end{center}

\noindent The recently founded International Max-Planck Research School 
for Astronomy and Cosmic Physics (IMPRS) at the University of
Heidelberg invites applications for its Ph.D. program. \\

\noindent The school is located in Heidelberg (Germany) which is one of 
the most beautiful old university towns in Europe.  We offer
outstanding research and training opportunities with excellent
instrumental, observational, and theoretical research facilities at
five first-rate institutes, namely
\begin{itemize}
\item the Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA),
\item the Max-Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics (MPIK),
\item the Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics (ITA),
\item the Astronomisches Recheninstitut (I.f. Astronomical Computing, ARI),
\item the Landessternwarte (State Observatory) Heidelberg (LSW).
\end{itemize}

\noindent The main research topics at these five institutions are:
Planet and star formation - extrasolar planets and substellar objects
- astrometry - formation, evolution and dynamics of galaxies - active
galactic nuclei and massive black holes - gravitational lensing -
cosmology and structure formation - high energy astrophysics, cosmic
rays and the search for non-baryonic dark matter - state-of-the-art
instrumentation for astronomy and astroparticle physics. \\

\noindent IMPRS for Astronomy and Cosmic Physics at the University of 
Heidelberg has established a comprehensive curriculum including
regular lectures, seminars, invited guest lectures, and advanced
summer schools.  Ph.D. research projects will be defined and
supervised by scientists at one of the participating institutes. \\

\noindent IMPRS Heidelberg is open for students from all countries and 
offers several 3-year Ph.D. fellowships for both international and
national students.  Interested students are invited to apply by 15
January 2005 for the academic year starting in September 2005.  In
general, applicants should have a Masters or Diploma in Physics or
Astronomy (or equivalent) including a corresponding thesis. Successful
applicants will receive financial support through a PhD fellowship. \\

\noindent For further details on IMPRS Heidelberg and the application 
procedure, we refer to our web-site at
http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/imprs-hd/ \\

\noindent Under /poster2.html you will also find a poster of IMPRS 
Heidelberg.  We would be happy if you further distribute it among
other colleagues and interested students.  Thank you in advance for
your support. \\

\noindent With kind regards,\\

\noindent Christian Fendt \\
Coordinating Scientist \\
International Max Planck School for Astronomy and Cosmic Physics at the 
University of Heidelberg \\

\bigskip

%========================================================================
%   astro-ph Listings
%========================================================================
\centerline{
{\LARGE\bf{Recent astro-ph Listings}}
}

\bigskip

{\small
\begin{description}
  
\item[]astro-ph/0412389
\\ {\bf Title:} Spectroscopy of Red Giants in the LMC Bar: Abundances, Kinematics, and the Age-Metallicity Relation
\\ {\bf Authors:} Andrew A. Cole (1), E. Tolstoy (1), J.S. Gallagher III (2), T.A. Smecker-Hane (3) ((1) Kapteyn Institute, (2) U. Wisconsin-Madison, (3) U.California, Irvine)
\\ {\bf Comments:} Accepted for publication in AJ; 54 pages, 14 figures (3 color), 5 tables
     
\item[]astro-ph/0412367
\\ {\bf Title:} B-type Supergiants in the SMC: Chemical compositions and comparison of static and unified models
\\ {\bf Authors:} P.L. Dufton, R.S.I. Ryans, C. Trundle, D.J. Lennon, I. Hubeny, T. Lanz, C. Allende Prieto
\\ {\bf Comments:} Submitted to astronomy and astrophysics
     
\item[]astro-ph/0412318
\\ {\bf Title:} Formation and evolution of the Magellanic Clouds. I.Origin of structural, kinematical, and chemical properties of the Large Magellanic Cloud
\\ {\bf Authors:} K. Bekki, M. Chiba
\\ {\bf Comments:} 26 pages, 26 figures, MNRAS in press (For clearer figures: See jpeg figures for fig5, 6, 7, 11, and 22)
     
\item[]astro-ph/0412312
\\ {\bf Title:} The gravitational and hydrodynamical interaction between the LMC and the Galaxy
\\ {\bf Authors:} Chiara Mastropietro (1), Ben Moore (1), Lucio Mayer (1), James Wadsley (2), Joachim Stadel (1) ((1) University of Zurich, (2) McMaster University)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 12 pages, 15 figures. Submitted to MNRAS. Movies and high resolution images are available at this http URL Corrected typos
     
\item[]astro-ph/0411672
\\ {\bf Title:} Forty eclipsing binaries in the Small Magellanic Cloud: fundamental parameters and Cloud distance
\\ {\bf Authors:} R. W. Hilditch, I. D. Howarth, T. J. Harries
\\ {\bf Comments:} paper accepted on 22 November 2004 for publication by MNRAS; 26 pages, 6 tables, 12 figures
     
\item[]astro-ph/0411631
\\ {\bf Title:} Space telescope Imaging Spectrograph ultraviolet spectra of LMC planetary nebulae. A study of carbon abundances and stellar evolution
\\ {\bf Authors:} L. Stanghellini, R. A. Shaw, D. Gilmore
\\ {\bf Comments:} Ap. J., in press
     
\item[]astro-ph/0411453
\\ {\bf Title:} The Parkes HI Survey of the Magellanic System
\\ {\bf Authors:} C. Bruens (1), J. Kerp (1), L. Staveley-Smith (2), U. Mebold (1), M.E. Putman (3), R.F. Haynes (2), P.M.W. Kalberla (1), E. Muller (4), M.D. Filipovic (2 and 5) ((1) Radioastronomisches Institut, University of Bonn, (2) Australia Telescope National Facility, CSIRO, (3) Department of Astronomy, University of Michigan, (5) University of Western Sydney)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 23 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A\&A
     
\item[]astro-ph/0411448
\\ {\bf Title:} The Initial Mass Function toward the low-mass end in the Large Magellanic Cloud with HST/WFPC2 Observations
\\ {\bf Authors:} D. Gouliermis, W. Brandner, Th. Henning
\\ {\bf Comments:} 16 pages, 11 figures, Submitted to ApJ
     
\item[]astro-ph/0411203
\\ {\bf Title:} Cepheid Period-Luminosity Relations: Galactic vs. LMC and the Results from t-Test
\\ {\bf Authors:} C. Ngeow (UMASS), S. Kanbur (UMASS)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to the "Gaia: Three Dimension Universe", will be published by ESA
     
\item[]astro-ph/0411201
\\ {\bf Title:} Discovery of an OH(1720 MHz) Maser in the LMC
\\ {\bf Authors:} D.A. Roberts, F. Yusef-Zadeh
\\ {\bf Comments:} 11 pages, two figures, AJ, in press
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410708
\\ {\bf Title:} Spitzer IRAC Observations of Star Formation in N159 in the LMC
\\ {\bf Authors:} Terry J. Jones, Charles E. Woodward, Martha L. Boyer, Robert D. Gehrz, Elisha Polomski
\\ {\bf Comments:} 14 figures
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410683
\\ {\bf Title:} A 4.8- and 8.6-GHz Survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud: I The Images
\\ {\bf Authors:} J. R. Dickel (1), V. J. McIntyre (2), R. A. Gruendl (1), D. K. Milne (2) ((1) UIUC and (2) CSIRO/ATNF)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 28 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in the Feb 2005 AJ
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410539
\\ {\bf Title:} Phase-dependent changes in the wind lines in the HMXRB's SMC X-1 and 4U1700-37
\\ {\bf Authors:} R.C. Iping (1), G. Sonneborn (1), L. Kaper (2), G. Hammerschlag-Hensberge (2) ((1) NASA's GSFC, (2) University of Amsterdam)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 3 pages, 3 figures
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410495
\\ {\bf Title:} Phase Variation in the Pulse Profile of SMC X-1
\\ {\bf Authors:} J. Neilsen (1 and 2), R.C. Hickox (2), S.D. Vrtilek (2) ((1) Kenyon College, (2) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL; v2 minor corrections, as will appear in ApJL
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410398
\\ {\bf Title:} Long Period Variables in the LMC: Results from MACHO and 2MASS
\\ {\bf Authors:} Oliver J. Fraser, Suzanne L. Hawley, Kem H. Cook, Stefan C. Keller
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410393
\\ {\bf Title:} Eclipsing Binaries in the Young LMC Cluster NGC 1850
\\ {\bf Authors:} Stuart F. Taylor
\\ {\bf Comments:} 27 pages, 11 figures; Accepted for publication in December 2004 PASP. (No changes in paper from original submitted version; only this comment reflecting acceptance by the Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific has been added.)
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410318
\\ {\bf Title:} Chemical compositions of Four B-type Supergiants in the SMC Wing
\\ {\bf Authors:} J.-K. Lee, W.R.J. Rolleston, P.L. Dufton, R.S.I. Ryan
\\ {\bf Comments:} 11 pages, 2 figues, A\&A accepted
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410271
\\ {\bf Title:} An Unbiased Far Ultraviolet Survey of Magellanic Cloud Supernova Remnants
\\ {\bf Authors:} Parviz Ghavamian, William P. Blair, Ravi Sankrit, Charles Danforth, Kenneth Sembach
\\ {\bf Comments:} 3 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Astrophysics in the Far Ultraviolet: Five Years of Discovery with FUSE, ASP Conf. series, eds. G. Sonneborn, W. Moos \& B.-G. Andersson
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410227
\\ {\bf Title:} Third Dredge-up in Low Mass Stars: Solving the LMC Carbon Star Mystery
\\ {\bf Authors:} Richard J. Stancliffe (1), Robert G. Izzard (2), Christopher A. Tout (1) ((1) Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, (2) CIQuA)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 6 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410093
\\ {\bf Title:} NLTE Model Atmosphere Analysis of the LMC Supersoft X-ray Source CAL 83
\\ {\bf Authors:} Thierry Lanz, Gisela A. Telis, Marc Audard, Frits Paerels, Andrew P. Rasmussen, Ivan Hubeny
\\ {\bf Comments:} 32 pages; 7 figures; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal (2005 January 20 issue)
     
\item[]astro-ph/0410074
\\ {\bf Title:} Optical properties of SMC X-ray binaries
\\ {\bf Authors:} M.J.Coe, W.R.T.Edge, J.L.Galache, V.A.McBride (Southampton University)
\\ {\bf Comments:} 15 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. A gzipped PS version of this paper with higher resolution figures is available from this http URL

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