The puzzle of metallicity and multiple stellar populations in the Globular Clusters in Fornax
F. D'Antona, V. Caloi, A. D'Ercole, M. Tailo, E. Vesperini, P., Ventura, M. Di Criscienzo

TL;DR
This study investigates the multiple stellar populations and metallicity in Fornax globular clusters, suggesting they contain significant second-generation stars and proposing models for their helium distribution and initial masses.
Contribution
It introduces a chemical evolution model explaining helium distribution in Fornax clusters and links HB morphology to multiple stellar generations with specific initial mass estimates.
Findings
Fornax clusters F2, F3, and F5 contain ~54-65% second-generation stars.
Models suggest initial cluster masses were 4-10 times larger than current masses.
A possible fraction of ~20% blue HB stars in Fornax field supports the multiple population hypothesis.
Abstract
We examine the photometric data for Fornax clusters, focussing our attention on their horizontal branch color distribution and, when available, on the RR Lyr variables fraction and period distribution. Based on our understanding of the HB morphology in terms of varying helium content in the context of multiple stellar generations, we show that clusters F2, F3 and F5 must contain substantial fractions of second generation stars (~54-65%). On the basis of a simple chemical evolution model we show that the helium distribution in these clusters can be reproduced by models with cluster initial masses ranging from values equal to ~4 to ~10 times larger than the current masses. Models with a very short second generation star formation episode can also reproduce the observed helium distribution but require larger initial masses up to about twenty times the current mass. While the lower limit of…
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