The Chemical Evolution of Globular Clusters - II. Metals and Fluorine
Patricia Sanchez-Blazquez (UAM), Andrea Marcolini (JHI), Brad K., Gibson (JHI), Amanda I. Karakas (ANU), Kate Pilkington (JHI), Francesco, Calura (JHI)

TL;DR
This paper extends a chemical evolution model for globular clusters across a broad metallicity range, incorporating more elements and isotopes, and discusses implications for supernova yields and stellar contributions.
Contribution
It applies a new chemical evolution model to a wider metallicity range and more chemical species, refining understanding of globular cluster formation and nucleosynthesis.
Findings
Most abundance trends are reproduced by the model.
Higher production of Ca, Si, and Cu in low-metallicity supernovae is suggested.
A reduction in carbon production from AGB stars explains observed C-N trends.
Abstract
In the first paper in this series, we proposed a new framework in which to model the chemical evolution of globular clusters. This model, is predicated upon the assumption that clusters form within an interstellar medium enriched locally by the ejecta of a single Type Ia supernova and varying numbers of asymptotic giant branch stars, superimposed on an ambient medium pre-enriched by low-metallicity Type II supernovae. Paper I was concerned with the application of this model to the observed abundances of several reactive elements and so-called non-metals for three classical intermediate-metallicity clusters, with the hallmark of the work being the successful recovery of many of their well-known elemental and isotopic abundance anomalies. Here, we expand upon our initial analysis by (a) applying the model to a much broader range of metallicities (from the factor of three explored in Paper…
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