Time-Series Photometry of Globular Clusters: M62 (NGC 6266), the Most RR Lyrae-Rich Globular Cluster in the Galaxy?
R. Contreras (1,2), M. Catelan (2), H. A. Smith (3), B. J. Pritzl (4),, J. Borissova (5), C. A. Kuehn (3) ((1) INAF-Bologna, (2) PUC-Chile, (3), Michigan State University, (4) Wisconsin/Oshkosk, (5) Valpara\'iso)

TL;DR
This study presents the largest time-series CCD photometry dataset for the globular cluster M62, revealing it as potentially the most RR Lyrae-rich cluster in the Milky Way and analyzing its variable star population and Oosterhoff classification.
Contribution
It provides the largest catalog of variable stars in M62, including many new discoveries, and offers insights into the cluster's Oosterhoff type and metallicity influence.
Findings
M62 is among the top two most RR Lyrae-rich globular clusters in the Galaxy.
The study identified 245 variable stars, with 179 new discoveries.
M62 is classified as an Oosterhoff type I system.
Abstract
We present new time-series CCD photometry, in the B and V bands, for the moderately metal-rich ([Fe/H] ~ -1.3) Galactic globular cluster (GC) M62 (NGC 6266). The present dataset is the largest obtained so far for this cluster, and consists of 168 images per filter, obtained with the Warsaw 1.3m telescope at the Las Campanas Observatory (LCO) and the 1.3m telescope of the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO), in two separate runs over the time span of three months. The procedure adopted to detect the variable stars was the optimal image subtraction method (ISIS v2.2), as implemented by Alard. The photometry was performed using both ISIS and DAOPHOT/ALLFRAME. We have identified 245 variable stars in the cluster fields that have been analyzed so far, of which 179 are new discoveries. Of these variables, 133 are fundamental mode RR Lyrae stars (RRab), 76 are first overtone (RRc)…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
