On a new parameter to estimate the helium content in old stellar systems
F. Troisi, G. Bono, P. B. Stetson, A. Pietrinferni, A. Weiss, M., Fabrizio, I. Ferraro, A. Di Cecco, G. Iannicola, R. Buonanno, A. Calamida, F., Caputo, C. E. Corsi, M. Dall'Ora, A. Kunder, M. Monelli, M. Nonino, A. M., Piersimoni, L. Pulone, M. Romaniello, A. R. Walker

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new photometric parameter, {\Delta}{\xi}, to estimate helium content in old stellar systems, demonstrating its linear sensitivity to helium and testing it on Galactic Globular Clusters, revealing discrepancies with current models.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel parameter {\Delta}{\xi} for helium estimation, validated with globular cluster data, highlighting potential overestimations in stellar models.
Findings
{\Delta}{\xi} correlates linearly with helium content.
Observed {\Delta}{\xi} values are smaller than model predictions.
Including envelope overshooting in models can resolve discrepancies.
Abstract
We introduce a new parameter {\Delta}{\xi} - the difference in magnitude between the red giant branch (RGB) bump and a point on the main sequence (MS) at the same color as the bump, the "benchmark" - to estimate the helium content in old stellar systems. Its sensitivity to helium is linear over the entire metallicity range, it is minimally affected by age, uncertainties in the photometric zero-point, reddening or the effects of evolution on the horizontal branch. The two main drawbacks are the need for precise and large photometric data sets, and a strong dependence of the {\Delta}Y/{\Delta}{\xi} slope on metallicity. To test the {\Delta}{\xi} parameter we selected 22 Galactic Globular Clusters (GGCs) with low foreground reddening, a broad range of iron abundance and precise, relatively deep, and homogeneous multi-band (B,V,I) photometry. We found that the observed {\Delta}{\xi} and…
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