113 research outputs found
A sequence of nitrogen-rich very red giants in the globular cluster NGC 1851
We present the abundances of N in a sample of 62 stars on the red giant
branch (RGB) in the peculiar globular cluster NGC 1851. The values of [N/Fe]
ratio were obtained by comparing the flux measured in the observed spectra with
that from synthetic spectra for up to about 15 features of CN. This is the
first time that N abundances are obtained for such a large sample of RGB stars
from medium-resolution spectroscopy in this cluster. With these abundances we
provide a chemical tagging of the split red giant branch found from several
studies in NGC 1851. The secondary, reddest sequence on the RGB is populated
almost exclusively by N-rich stars, confirming our previous suggestion based on
Stromgren magnitudes and colours. These giants are also, on average, enriched
in s-process elements such as Ba, and are likely the results of pollution from
low mass stars that experienced episodes of third dredge-up in the asymptotic
giant branch phase.Comment: Version to match the one in press on Astronomy and Astrophysic
The link between chemical anomalies along the red giant branch and the horizontal branch extension in globular clusters
We find a strong correlation between the extension of the Na-O
anticorrelation observed in red giant branch (RGB) stars and the high
temperature extension of the horizontal branch (HB) blue tails of Galactic
globular clusters (GCs). The longer is the O-depleted tail of the Na-O
anticorrelation observed in the RGB stars, the higher is the maximum
temperature reached by the bluest HB stars in the GC. This result provides a
clear, empirical evidence of a link between the extension of the HB and the
presence of star-to-star abundance variations of proton-capture elements in GC
stars. We discuss the possible interpretation of this correlation.Comment: Comments: 6 pages, 1 figure, uses emulateapj.cls; accepted for
publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
Terzan 8: a Sagittarius-flavoured globular cluster
Massive globular clusters (GCs) contain at least two generations of stars
with slightly different ages and clearly distinct light elements abundances.
The Na-O anticorrelation is the best studied chemical signature of multiple
stellar generations. Low-mass clusters appear instead to be usually chemically
homogeneous. We are investigating low-mass GCs to understand what is the lower
mass limit where multiple populations can form, mainly using the Na and O
abundance distribution. We used VLT/FLAMES spectra of giants in the low-mass,
metal-poor GC Terzan 8, belonging to the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy, to determine
abundances of Fe, O, Na, alpha-, Fe-peak, and neutron-capture elements in six
stars observed with UVES and 14 observed with GIRAFFE. The average metallicity
is [Fe/H]=-2.27+/-0.03 (rms=0.08), based on the six high-resolution UVES
spectra. Only one star, observed with GIRAFFE, shows an enhanced abundance of
Na and we tentatively assign it to the second generation. In this cluster, at
variance with what happens in more massive GCs, the second generation seems to
represent at most a small minority fraction. We discuss the implications of our
findings, comparing Terzan 8 with the other Sgr dSph GCs, to GCs and field
stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud, Fornax, and in other dwarfs galaxies.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 10 tables; accepted for publication on
Astronomy and Astrophysic
Observational evidence for a different IMF in the early Galaxy
The unexpected high incidence of carbon-enhanced, s-process enriched
unevolved stars amongst extremely metal-poor stars in the halo provides a
significant constraint on the Initial Mass Function (IMF) in the early Galaxy.
We argue that these objects are evidence for the past existence of a large
population of intermediate-mass stars, and conclude that the IMF in the early
Galaxy was different from the present, and shifted toward higher masses.Comment: 14 pages, 1 color figure, accepted for publication on Ap
An Abundance Analysis for Five Red Horizontal Branch Stars in the Extremely Metal Rich Globular Cluster NGC 6553
We provide a high dispersion line-by-line abundance analysis of five red HB
stars in the extremely metal rich galactic globular cluster NGC 6553. These red
HB stars are significantly hotter than the very cool stars near the tip of the
giant branch in such a metal rich globular cluster and hence their spectra are
much more amenable to an abundance analysis than would be the case for red
giants.
We find that the mean [Fe/H] for NGC 6553 is -0.16 dex, comparable to the
mean abundance in the galactic bulge found by McWilliam & Rich (1994) and
considerably higher than that obtained from an analysis of two red giants in
this cluster by Barbuy etal (1999). The relative abundance for the best
determined alpha process element (Ca) indicates an excess of alpha process
elements of about a factor of two. The metallicity of NGC 6553 reaches the
average of the Galactic bulge and of the solar neighborhood.Comment: 29 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Ap
Chemical characterization of the globular cluster NGC 5634 associated to the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy
As part of our on-going project on the homogeneous chemical characterization
of multiple stellar populations in globular clusters (GCs), we studied NGC
5634, associated to the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy, using
high-resolution spectroscopy of red giant stars collected with FLAMES@VLT. We
present here the radial velocity distribution of the 45 observed stars, 43 of
which are member, the detailed chemical abundance of 22 species for the seven
stars observed with UVES-FLAMES, and the abundance of six elements for stars
observed with GIRAFFE. On our homogeneous UVES metallicity scale we derived a
low metallicity [Fe/H]=-1.867 +/-0.019 +/-0.065 dex (+/-statistical
+/-systematic error) with sigma=0.050 dex (7 stars). We found the normal
anti-correlations between light elements (Na and O, Mg and Al), signature of
multiple populations typical of massive and old GCs. We confirm the
associations of NGC 5634 to the Sgr dSph, from which the cluster was lost a few
Gyr ago, on the basis of its velocity and position and the abundance ratios of
alpha and neutron capture elements.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 11 tables; accepted for publication on
Astronomy and Astrophysic
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