Stars caught in the braking stage in young Magellanic Clouds clusters
Francesca D'Antona, Antonino P. Milone, Marco Tailo, Paolo Ventura,, Enrico Vesperini, Marcella Di Criscienzo

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the extended turnoff regions in Magellanic Cloud clusters are due to stellar rotation and braking, which can mimic age spreads, offering a new interpretation of observed color-magnitude diagrams.
Contribution
It introduces a rotational stellar evolution model explaining extended turnoffs as effects of stellar braking, challenging the age spread hypothesis in Magellanic Cloud clusters.
Findings
Rotating stars that slow down can explain the extended turnoff without age spreads.
Blue main sequence stars may be younger or rapidly rotating stars that have slowed down.
Rotational evolution accounts for observed age differences in clusters.
Abstract
The color-magnitude diagrams of many Magellanic Cloud clusters (with ages up to 2 billion years) display extended turnoff regions where the stars leave the main sequence, suggesting the presence of multiple stellar populations with ages which may differ even by hundreds million years (Mackey et al. 2008, Milone et al. 2009, Girardi et al. 2011). A strongly debated question is whether such an extended turnoff is instead due to populations with different stellar rotations (Girardi et al. 2011, Goudfrooij et al. 2011, Rubele et al. 2013, Li et al. 2014). The recent discovery of a `split' main sequence in some younger clusters (about 80--400Myr) added another piece to this puzzle. The blue (red) side of the main sequence is consistent with slowly (rapidly) rotating stellar models (D'Antona et al. 2015, Milone et al. 2016, Correnti et al. 2017, Milone et al 2016), but a complete theoretical…
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