Mining SDSS in search of Multiple Populations in Globular Clusters
C. Lardo, M. Bellazzini, E. Pancino, E. Carretta, A. Bragaglia, E., Dalessandro

TL;DR
This study uses SDSS photometry to detect and analyze multiple stellar populations in globular clusters by examining color spreads and their correlation with chemical abundances and spatial distributions.
Contribution
It provides evidence of u-g color spreads in nine globular clusters and links these to chemical variations and different radial distributions of stellar generations.
Findings
Significant u-g color spreads found in 7 clusters.
Redder stars are more centrally concentrated and richer in Na.
Color spreads correlate with chemical abundances and spatial distributions.
Abstract
Several recent studies have reported the detection of an anomalous color spread along the red giant branch (RGB) of some globular clusters (GC) that appears only when color indices including a near ultraviolet band (such as Johnson U or Stromgren u) are considered. This anomalous spread in color indexes such as U-B or c_{y} has been shown to correlate with variations in the abundances of light elements such as C, N, O, Na, etc., which, in turn, are generally believed to be associated with subsequent star formation episodes that occurred in the earliest few 10^{8} yr of the cluster's life. Here we use publicly available u, g, r Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry to search for anomalous u-g spreads in the RGBs of nine Galactic GCs. In seven of them (M 2, M 3, M 5, M 13, M 15, M 92 and M 53), we find evidence of a statistically significant spread in the u-g color, not seen in g-r and not…
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