Photometric signatures of multiple stellar populations in Galactic globular clusters
L. Sbordone (1, 2), M. Salaris (3, 1), A. Weiss (1), S. Cassisi, (4) ((1) Max-Planck-Institut fuer Astrophysik, Garching bei Muenchen,, Germany, (2) GEPI - Observatoire de Paris, CNRS, Universite' Paris Diderot,, France, (3) Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores

TL;DR
This study models how chemical abundance variations in globular cluster stars influence their spectra and colors, aiding the photometric detection of multiple stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides synthetic spectra and bolometric corrections for different chemical compositions, linking abundance variations to observable color-magnitude diagram features.
Findings
Blue filters are most sensitive to CNO abundance variations.
Color-magnitude diagrams with uvy and UB filters best reveal multiple populations.
Helium variations mainly affect stellar interior, not spectral flux distribution.
Abstract
We have calculated synthetic spectra for typical chemical element mixtures (i.e., a standard alpha-enhanced distribution, and distributions displaying CN and ONa anticorrelations) found in the various subpopulations harboured by Galactic globular clusters. From the spectra we have determined bolometric corrections to the standard Johnson-Cousins and Stroemgren filters, and finally predicted colours. These bolometric corrections and colour-transformations, coupled to our theoretical isochrones with the appropriate chemical composition, provide a complete and self-consistent set of theoretical predictions for the effect of abundance variations on the observed cluster CMD. CNO abundance variations affect mainly wavelengths shorter than 400 nm, due to the arise of molecular absorption bands in cooler atmospheres. As a consequence, colour and magnitude changes are largest in the blue…
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