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On the anomalous red giant branch of the globular cluster Omega Cen

Authors :
Freyhammer, L. M.
Monelli, M.
Bono, G.
Cunti, P.
Ferraro, I.
Calamida, A.
Degl'Innocenti, S.
Moroni, P. G. Prada
Del Principe, M.
Piersimoni, A.
Iannicola, G.
Stetson, P. B.
Andersen, M. I.
Buonanno, R.
Corsi, C. E.
Dall'Ora, M.
Petersen, J. O.
Pulone, L.
Sterken, C.
Storm, J.
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
arXiv, 2005.

Abstract

We present three different optical and near-infrared (NIR) data sets for evolved stars in the Galactic Globular Cluster Omega Cen The comparison between observations and homogeneous sets of stellar isochrones and Zero-Age Horizontal Branches provides two reasonable fits. Both of them suggest that the so-called anomalous branch has a metal-intermediate chemical composition (-1.1 < [Fe/H] < -0.8) and is located ~500 pc beyond the bulk of Omega Cen stars. These findings are mainly supported by the shape of the subgiant branch in four different color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs). The most plausible fit requires a higher reddening, E(B-V)=0.155 vs. 0.12, and suggests that the anomalous branch is coeval, within empirical and theoretical uncertainties, to the bulk of Omega Cen stellar populations. This result is supported by the identification of a sample of faint horizontal branch stars that might be connected with the anomalous branch. Circumstantial empirical evidence seems to suggest that the stars in this branch form a clump of stars located beyond the cluster.<br />Accepted for publication on ApJ. High resolution figures can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.mporzio.astro.it/dist/monelli2/

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c7a8aa7639ded72cb1b959fb42ccb82
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0502585