The GeMS/GSAOI Galactic Globular Cluster Survey (G4CS) I: A Pilot Study of the stellar populations in NGC 2298 and NGC 3201
Stephanie Monty (1,2), Thomas H. Puzia (3), Bryan W. Miller (4),, Eleazar R. Carrasco (4), Mirko Simunovic (5), Mischa Schirmer (4,6), Peter B., Stetson (7), Santi Cassisi (8), Kim A. Venn (1), Aaron Dotter (9), Paul, Goudfrooij (10), Sibilla Perina (11), Peter Pessev (12)

TL;DR
This study presents deep near-infrared and optical observations of globular clusters NGC 2298 and NGC 3201, deriving their ages, distances, and reddening with high precision using advanced adaptive optics and combined HST data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel combination of adaptive optics near-IR imaging with HST data to accurately determine globular cluster parameters, including ages, using multiple color-magnitude diagrams.
Findings
Derived ages of 12.2 and 13.2 Gyr for NGC 3201 and NGC 2298.
Achieved high-precision proper-motion cleaning and differential reddening correction.
Provided robust constraints on cluster ages consistent with recent studies.
Abstract
We present the first results from the GeMS/GSAOI Galactic Globular Cluster Survey (G4CS) of the Milky-Way globular clusters (GCs) NGC 3201 and NGC 2298. Using the Gemini South Adaptive Optics Imager (GSAOI), in tandem with the Gemini Multi-conjugate adaptive optics System (GeMS) on the 8.1-meter Gemini-South telescope, we collected deep near-IR observations of both clusters, resolving their constituent stellar populations down to Vega mag. Point spread function (PSF) photometry was performed on the data using spatially-variable PSFs to generate photometric catalogues for both clusters. These catalogues were combined with Hubble Space Telescope (HST) data to augment the photometric wavelength coverage, yielding catalogues that span the near-ultraviolet (UV) to near-infrared (near-IR). We then applied 0.14 mas/year accurate proper-motion cleaning,…
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