Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the extremely metal-poor globular cluster EXT8 in Messier 31
S. S. Larsen (1), A. J. Romanowsky (2,4), J. P. Brodie (3,4) ((1), Department of Astrophysics/IMAPP, Radboud University, (2) San Jose State, Univ, (3) Swinburne Univ. of Technology, (4) Univ. of California, Observatories)

TL;DR
This study presents Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the extremely metal-poor globular cluster EXT8 in M31, revealing its stellar populations, metallicity, and structural properties, and discussing implications for globular cluster formation theories.
Contribution
First detailed colour-magnitude diagram of EXT8, providing insights into its stellar populations and metallicity spread, challenging existing globular cluster formation models.
Findings
EXT8 has an extremely low metallicity of [Fe/H]=-2.91.
The upper red giant branch is bluer and steeper than in more metal-rich GCs.
No significant intrinsic colour or metallicity spread detected.
Abstract
We recently found the globular cluster (GC) EXT8 in M31 to have an extremely low metallicity of [Fe/H]=-2.91+/-0.04 using high-resolution spectroscopy. Here we present a colour-magnitude diagram (CMD) for EXT8, obtained with the Wide Field Camera 3 on board the Hubble Space Telescope. Compared with the CMDs of metal-poor Galactic GCs, we find that the upper red giant branch (RGB) of EXT8 is about 0.03 mag bluer in F606W-F814W and slightly steeper, as expected from the low spectroscopic metallicity. The observed colour spread on the upper RGB is consistent with being caused entirely by the measurement uncertainties, and we place an upper limit of sigma(F606W-F814W)=0.015 mag on any intrinsic colour spread. The corresponding metallicity spread can be up to sigma([Fe/H])=0.2 dex or >0.7 dex, depending on the isochrone library adopted. The horizontal branch (HB) is located mostly on the…
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