The SUMO project I. A survey of multiple populations in globular clusters
M. Monelli, A. P. Milone, P. B. Stetson, A. F. Marino, S. Cassisi, A., Del Pino Molina, M. Salaris, A. Aparicio, M. Asplund, F. Grundahl, G. Piotto,, A. Weiss, R. Carrera, M. Cebrian, S. Murabito, A. Pietrinferni, L. Sbordone

TL;DR
This survey of 23 globular clusters reveals that multiple stellar populations with distinct chemical compositions are common, identifiable through a new photometric index, offering a large-statistics alternative to spectroscopy.
Contribution
The paper introduces the cubi index, a new photometric tool for identifying multiple stellar populations in globular clusters using ground-based data.
Findings
All studied clusters show broadened or multimodal red giant branches.
Multiple populations with different chemical abundances are common.
The cubi index effectively identifies multiple sequences along various evolutionary stages.
Abstract
We present a general overview and the first results of the SUMO project (a SUrvey of Multiple pOpulations in Globular Clusters). The objective of this survey is the study of multiple stellar populations in the largest sample of globular clusters homogeneously analysed to date. To this aim we obtained high signal-to-noise (S/N>50) photometry for main sequence stars with mass down to ~0.5 M_SUN in a large sample of clusters using both archival and proprietary U, B, V, and I data from ground-based telescopes. In this paper, we focus on the occurrence of multiple stellar populations in twenty three clusters. We have defined a new photometric index cubi= (U-B)-(B-I), that turns out to be very effective for identifying multiple sequences along the red giant branch (RGB). We found that in the V-cubi diagram all clusters presented in this paper show broadened or multimodal RGBs, with the…
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