A Large Sample Study of Red Giants in the Globular Cluster Omega Centauri (NGC 5139)
Christian I. Johnson, Catherine A. Pilachowski, R. Michael Rich, and, Jon P. Fulbright

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical abundances of 66 red giant stars in Omega Centauri, revealing multiple metallicity peaks, complex element correlations, and insights into stellar formation and nucleosynthesis processes within the cluster.
Contribution
It provides a detailed chemical abundance analysis of a large sample of RGB stars in Omega Centauri, highlighting multiple metallicity populations and their nucleosynthetic origins, which advances understanding of cluster formation.
Findings
Multiple metallicity peaks at [Fe/H]=-1.75, -1.45, -1.05, -0.75.
Na and Al show metallicity-dependent correlations and dispersions.
Most stars are alpha-rich and show s-process enrichment at higher metallicities.
Abstract
We present abundances of several light, alpha, Fe-peak, and neutron-capture elements for 66 red giant branch (RGB) stars in the Galactic globular cluster Omega Centauri. Our observations lie in the range 12.0<V<13.5 and focus on the intermediate and metal-rich RGBs. We find that there are at least four peaks in the metallicity distribution function at [Fe/H]=-1.75, -1.45, -1.05, and -0.75, which correspond to about 55%, 30%, 10%, and 5% of our sample, respectively. Additionally, the most metal-rich stars are the most centrally located. Na and Al are correlated despite exhibiting star-to-star dispersions of more than a factor of 10, but the distribution of those elements appears to be metallicity dependent and are divided at [Fe/H]~-1.2. About 40-50% of stars with [Fe/H]<-1.2 have Na and Al abundances consistent with production solely in Type II supernovae and match observations of disk…
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