On the maximum helium content of multiple populations in the globular cluster NGC6752
Fabrice Martins (1), William Chantereau (2), Corinne Charbonnel (3,4), ((1) LUPM, CNRS, Montpellier University, (2) Strasbourg University, CNRS, (3), University of Geneva, (4) IRAP, CNRS, Toulouse University)

TL;DR
This study assesses whether current photometric methods accurately measure the maximum helium content in multiple stellar populations of NGC6752, finding they likely do not underestimate the true maximum helium abundance.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that synthetic modeling and analysis can reliably estimate the maximum helium content, showing current observations are close to the true maximum in NGC6752.
Findings
Synthetic clusters can recover input maximum Y values.
Current observations likely capture the true maximum Y.
Stars with helium content above 0.3 are unlikely in NGC6752.
Abstract
Multiple populations in globular clusters are usually explained by the formation of stars out of material with a chemical composition that is polluted to different degrees by the ejecta of short-lived, massive stars of various type. Among other things, these polluters differ by the amount of helium they spread in the surrounding medium. In this study we investigate whether the present-day photometric method used to infer the helium content of multiple populations indeed gives the true value or underestimates it by missing very He-rich, but rare stars. We focus on the specific case of NGC6752. We compute atmosphere models and synthetic spectra along isochrones produced for this cluster for a very broad range of He abundances covering the predictions of different pollution scenarios, including the extreme case of the fast-rotating massive star (FRMS) scenario. We calculate synthetic…
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