A Hubble Space Telescope Study of the Enigmatic Milky Way Halo Globular Cluster Crater
Daniel R. Weisz, Sergey E. Koposov, Andrew E. Dolphin, Vasily, Belokurov, Mark Gieles, Mario L. Mateo, Edward W. Olszewski, Alison Sills,, Matthew G. Walker

TL;DR
This study uses deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging to analyze the stellar populations of the faint globular cluster Crater, revealing its properties, origin, and implications for the Milky Way's accretion history.
Contribution
It provides detailed physical characterization of Crater, establishing it as a young cluster likely accreted from the Magellanic Clouds, and discusses its significance for understanding galaxy assembly.
Findings
Crater is a ~7.5 Gyr old, metal-poor stellar system.
Crater's properties suggest it is a young cluster, not a dwarf galaxy.
Crater may have originated from the Magellanic Clouds.
Abstract
We analyze the resolved stellar populations of the faint stellar system, Crater, based on deep optical imaging taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. The HST/ACS-based color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of Crater extends 4 magnitudes below the oldest main sequence turnoff, providing excellent leverage on Crater's physical properties. Structurally, Crater has a half-light radius of 20 pc and shows no evidence for tidal distortions. Crater is well-described by a simple stellar population with an age of 7.5 Gyr, [M/H], a M M, M, located at a distance of d 145 kpc, with modest uncertainties in these properties due to differences in the underlying stellar evolution models. The sparse sampling of stars above the turnoff and sub-giant branch are likely to be 1.0-1.4 M binary star systems (blue stragglers)…
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