# The Gaia-ESO Survey. Mg-Al anti-correlation in iDR4 globular clusters

**Authors:** E. Pancino (INAF-OAA, ASDC), the GES collaboration

arXiv: 1702.06083 · 2017-05-17

## TL;DR

This study uses Gaia-ESO Survey data to analyze the Mg-Al anti-correlation in globular clusters, revealing dependencies on metallicity and mass, and demonstrating the data's quality and potential for understanding multiple populations.

## Contribution

First demonstration of Gaia-ESO Survey data quality in globular cluster chemical analysis, including new data for NGC 5927 and insights into Mg-Al anti-correlation dependencies.

## Key findings

- Mg-Al anti-correlation varies with metallicity and mass
- No significant age dependency found
- Data confirms anti-correlation absence in low-mass or metal-rich clusters

## Abstract

We use Gaia-ESO Survey iDR4 data to explore the Mg-Al anti-correlation in globular clusters, that were observed as calibrators, as a demonstration of the quality of Gaia-ESO Survey data and analysis. The results compare well with the available literature, within 0.1 dex or less, after a small (compared to the internal spreads) offset between the UVES and the GIRAFFE data of 0.10-0.15 dex was taken into account. In particular, we present for the first time data for NGC 5927, one of the most metal-rich globular clusters studied in the literature so far with [Fe/H]=-0.49 dex, that was included to connect with the open cluster regime in the Gaia-ESO Survey internal calibration. The extent and shape of the Mg-Al anti-correlation provide strong constraints on the multiple population phenomenon in globular clusters. In particular, we studied the dependency of the Mg-Al anti-correlation extension with metallicity, present-day mass, and age of the clusters, using GES data in combination with a large set of homogenized literature measurements. We find a dependency with both metallicity and mass, that is evident when fitting for the two parameters simultaneously, but no significant dependency with age. We confirm that the Mg-Al anti-correlation is not seen in all clusters, but disappears for the less massive or most metal-rich ones. We also use our dataset to see whether a normal anti-correlation would explain the low [Mg/$\alpha$] observed in some extragalactic globular clusters, but find that none of the clusters in our sample can reproduce it, and more extreme chemical compositions (like the one of NGC 2419) would be required. We conclude that GES iDR4 data already meet the requirements set by the main survey goals, and can be used to study in detail globular clusters even if the analysis procedures were not specifically designed for them.

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.06083/full.md

## References

71 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.06083/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.06083