Evidence for a chemical enrichment coupling of globular clusters and field stars in the Fornax dSph
Benjamin Hendricks, Corrado Boeche, Christian I. Johnson, Matthias J., Frank, Andreas Koch, Mario Mateo, John I. Bailey III

TL;DR
This study reveals that the globular cluster H4 in the Fornax dwarf galaxy has a unique low alpha-element abundance, closely matching the field stars' chemical pattern, indicating a linked chemical evolution in low-mass galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed chemical abundance comparison between a globular cluster and field stars in Fornax, highlighting the coupling of their chemical enrichment histories.
Findings
H4 has low [alpha/Fe] ratios unlike typical globular clusters.
H4's chemical pattern matches that of the surrounding field stars.
Supports the idea that dwarf galaxy environments influence globular cluster chemistry.
Abstract
The globular cluster H4, located in the center of the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy, is crucial for understanding the formation and chemical evolution of star clusters in low-mass galactic environments. H4 is peculiar because the cluster is significantly more metal-rich than the galaxy's other clusters, is located near the galaxy center, and may also be the youngest cluster in the galaxy. In this study, we present detailed chemical abundances derived from high-resolution (R~28000) spectroscopy of an isolated H4 member star for comparison with a sample of 22 nearby Fornax field stars. We find the H4 member to be depleted in the alpha-elements Si, Ca, and Ti with [Si/Fe]=-0.35+-0.34, [Ca/Fe]=+0.05+-0.08, and [Ti/Fe]=-0.27+-0.23, resulting in an average [alpha/Fe]=-0.19+-0.14. If this result is representative of the average cluster properties, H4 is the only known system with a low…
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