Observational Constraints on Red and Blue Helium Burning Sequences
Kristen B. W. McQuinn, Evan D. Skillman, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Andrew, E. Dolphin, Jon Holtzman, Daniel R. Weisz, and Benjamin F. Williams

TL;DR
This study compares observed properties of helium burning stars in dwarf galaxies with stellar evolution models, confirming some model predictions but also identifying significant discrepancies in colors, ratios, and sequences, especially at certain luminosities and metallicities.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison between observed helium burning populations and theoretical isochrones, highlighting areas of agreement and discrepancy across metallicities.
Findings
Observations and models agree on blue to red HeB ratios for stars older than 50 Myr.
Significant color offsets of up to 0.15 mag for blue and 0.5 mag for red HeB populations.
Models overpredict the ratio of luminous blue to red HeB stars younger than 50 Myr.
Abstract
We derive the optical luminosity, colors, and ratios of the blue and red helium burning (HeB) stellar populations from archival Hubble Space Telescope observations of nineteen starburst dwarf galaxies and compare them with theoretical isochrones from Padova stellar evolution models across metallicities from Z=0.001 to 0.009. We find that the observational data and the theoretical isochrones for both blue and red HeB populations overlap in optical luminosities and colors and the observed and predicted blue to red HeB ratios agree for stars older than 50 Myr over the time bins studied. These findings confirm the usefulness of applying isochrones to interpret observations of HeB populations. However, there are significant differences, especially for the red HeB population. Specifically we find: (1) offsets in color between the observations and theoretical isochrones of order 0.15 mag (0.5…
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