A spectral atlas of post-main-sequence stars in omega Centauri: kinematics, evolution, enrichment and interstellar medium
Jacco Th. van Loon (Keele University, UK), Floor van Leeuwen (IoA, Cambridge, UK), Barry Smalley (Keele), Andrew W. Smith (Keele), Nicola A., Lyons (Keele), Iain McDonald (Keele), Martha L. Boyer (University of, Minnesota, USA)

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive spectral atlas of over 1500 post-main-sequence stars in omega Centauri, analyzing their kinematics, chemical compositions, and evolutionary stages to understand cluster dynamics and stellar evolution.
Contribution
It offers the first extensive spectral dataset of omega Centauri's post-main-sequence stars, including measurements of velocities, metallicities, and chemical abundances, revealing insights into cluster properties and stellar evolution.
Findings
Confirmed cluster membership for most stars.
Detected cluster rotation through radial velocities.
Identified chemical enrichment patterns in red giants.
Abstract
We present a spectral atlas of the post-main-sequence population of the most massive Galactic globular cluster, omega Centauri. Spectra were obtained of more than 1500 stars selected as uniformly as possible from across the (B, B-V) colour-magnitude diagram of the proper motion cluster member candidates of van Leeuwen et al. (2000). The spectra were obtained with the 2dF multi-fibre spectrograph at the Anglo Australian Telescope, and cover the approximate range lambda~3840-4940 Angstroem. We measure the radial velocities, effective temperatures, metallicities and surface gravities by fitting ATLAS9 stellar atmosphere models. We analyse the cluster membership and stellar kinematics, interstellar absorption in the Ca II K line at 3933 Angstroem, the RR Lyrae instability strip and the extreme horizontal branch, the metallicity spread and bimodal CN abundance distribution of red giants,…
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