NGC 1866: a milestone for understanding the chemical evolution of stellar populations in the LMC
A. Mucciarelli (1), S. Cristallo (2), E. Brocato (3), L. Pasquini (4),, O. Straniero (3), E. Caffau (5,6), G. Raimondo (3), A. Kaufer (7), I. Musella, (8), V. Ripepi (8), M. Romaniello (4), A.R. Walker (9) ((1) Astronomy, Department, Bologna University, Italy

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic data of stars in NGC 1866 to analyze its chemical composition, revealing homogeneity and differences from Galactic globular clusters, providing insights into the LMC's chemical evolution.
Contribution
It offers detailed chemical abundance measurements of NGC 1866 and compares its properties with other LMC clusters and field stars, highlighting unique evolutionary features.
Findings
NGC 1866 has an average [Fe/H] of -0.43 dex.
Cluster stars show chemical homogeneity and lack light element anti-correlations.
Field and cluster stars in the LMC exhibit similar chemical patterns, differing from the Milky Way.
Abstract
We present new FLAMES@VLT spectroscopic observations of 30 stars in the field of the LMC stellar cluster NGC 1866. NGC 1866 is one of the few young and massive globular cluster that is close enough so that its stars can be individually studied in detail. Radial velocities have been used to separate stars belonging to the cluster and to the LMC field and the same spectra have been used to derive chemical abundances for a variety of elements, from [Fe/H] to the light (i.e. Na, O, Mg...) to the heavy ones. The average iron abundance of NGC 1866 turns out to be [Fe/H]= -0.43+-0.01 dex (with a dispersion of 0.04 dex), from the analysis of 14 cluster-member stars. Within our uncertainties, the cluster stars are homogeneous, as far as chemical composition is concerned, independent of the evolutionary status. The observed cluster stars do not show any sign of the light elements…
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