Carbon in Red Giants in Globular Clusters and Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
Evan N. Kirby (1), Michelle Guo (2, 3), Andrew J. Zhang (4),, Michelle Deng (5), Judith G. Cohen (1), Puragra Guhathakurta (6), Matthew D., Shetrone (7), Young Sun Lee (8), and Luca Rizzi (9) ((1) Caltech, (2), Irvington High School, (3) Stanford, (4) The Harker School

TL;DR
This study measures carbon abundances in red giants from globular clusters and dwarf spheroidal galaxies, revealing differences in chemical evolution and enrichment histories between these stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides a large, comparative dataset of [C/Fe] in giants across multiple systems, highlighting the impact of metallicity and evolutionary processes on carbon abundance.
Findings
[C/Fe] decreases with luminosity in giants due to deep mixing.
Initial [C/Fe] varies with metallicity in dSphs.
dSphs show a different [C/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] trend than the Milky Way halo.
Abstract
We present carbon abundances of red giants in Milky Way globular clusters and dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSphs). Our sample includes measurements of carbon abundances for 154 giants in the clusters NGC 2419, M68, and M15 and 398 giants in the dSphs Sculptor, Fornax, Ursa Minor, and Draco. This sample doubles the number of dSph stars with measurements of [C/Fe]. The [C/Fe] ratio in the clusters decreases with increasing luminosity above log(L/L_sun) ~= 1.6, which can be explained by deep mixing in evolved giants. The same decrease is observed in dSphs, but the initial [C/Fe] of the dSph giants is not uniform. Stars in dSphs at lower metallicities have larger [C/Fe] ratios. We hypothesize that [C/Fe] (corrected to the initial carbon abundance) declines with increasing [Fe/H] due to the metallicity dependence of the carbon yield of asymptotic giant branch stars and due to the increasing…
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