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The Hubble Space Telescope UV Legacy Survey of Galactic globular clusters – IX. The Atlas of multiple stellar populations

Authors :
Santi Cassisi
Enrico Vesperini
Andrea Bellini
David Yong
Maurizio Salaris
Sergio Ortolani
Alvio Renzini
R. P. van der Marel
Antonio Aparicio
Thomas M. Brown
Jay Anderson
Luigi R. Bedin
Domenico Nardiello
Beatriz Barbuy
Antonino Milone
Anna F. Marino
Francesca D'Antona
I. R. King
Ata Sarajedini
Giampaolo Piotto
USA
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We use high-precision photometry of red-giant-branch (RGB) stars in 57 Galactic globular clusters (GCs), mostly from the `Hubble Space Telescope (HST) UV Legacy Survey of Galactic globular clusters', to identify and characterize their multiple stellar populations. For each cluster the pseudo two-color diagram (or `chromosome map') is presented, built with a suitable combination of stellar magnitudes in the F275W, F336W, F438W and F814W filters that maximizes the separation between multiple populations. In the chromosome map of most GCs (Type I clusters), stars separate in two distinct groups that we identify with the first (1G) and the second generation (2G). This identification is further supported by noticing that 1G stars have primordial (oxygen-rich, sodium-poor) chemical composition, whereas 2G stars are enhanced in sodium and depleted in oxygen. This 1G-2G separation is not possible for a few GCs where the two sequences have apparently merged into an extended, continuous sequence. In some GCs (Type II clusters) the 1G and/or the 2G sequences appear to be split, hence displaying more complex chromosome maps. These clusters exhibit multiple SGBs also in purely optical color-magnitude diagrams, with the fainter SGB joining into a red RGB which is populated by stars with enhanced heavy-element abundance. We measure the RGB width by using appropriate colors and pseudo-colors. When the metallicity dependence is removed, the RGB width correlates with the cluster mass. The fraction of 1G stars ranges from ~8% to ~67% and anticorrelates with the cluster mass, indicating that incidence and complexity of the multiple population phenomenon both increase with cluster mass.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a19f3266bab82a474b46b25e1693cbf4