We present an analysis of optical and ultraviolet Hubble Space Telescope
photometry for evolved stars in the core of the distant massive globular
cluster NGC 2419. We characterize the horizontal branch (HB) population in
detail including corrections for incompleteness on the long blue tail. We
present a method for removing (to first order) lifetime effects from the
distribution of HB stars to facilitate more accurate measurements of helium
abundance for clusters with blue HBs and to clarify the distribution of stars
reaching the zero-age HB. The population ratio R = N_HB / N_RGB implies there
may be slight helium enrichment among the EHB stars in the cluster, but that it
is likely to be small (dY < 0.05). An examination of the upper main sequence
does not reveal any sign of multiple populations. Through comparisons of
optical CMDs, we present evidence that the EHB clump in NGC 2419 contains the
end of the canonical horizontal branch, and that the boundary between the
normal HB stars and blue hook stars shows up as a change in the density of
stars in the CMD. This corresponds to a spectroscopically-verified gap in NGC
2808 and an "edge" in omega Cen. The more clearly visible HB gap at V = 23.5
appears to be too bright.(Abridged)Comment: 27 pages, 25 figures (some bitmapped), uses emulateapj, accepted to
Astronomical Journa