FSR 1776: a new globular cluster in the Galactic bulge?
B. Dias (1), T. Palma (2, 3), D. Minniti (4, 5), J. G., Fern\'andez-Trincado (6), J. Alonso-Garc\'ia (7, 8), B. Barbuy (9), J. J., Clari\'a (2, 3), M. Gomez (4), R. K. Saito (10) ((1) ITA/UTA, Chile, (2), UNC, Argentina, (3), CONICET, Argentina, (4), UNAB, Chile, (5) Vatican

TL;DR
This study confirms FSR 1776 as an old, metal-rich globular cluster in the Galactic bulge, providing detailed physical parameters and highlighting its significance in understanding bulge formation.
Contribution
The paper provides the first confirmation of FSR 1776 as a globular cluster and characterizes its age, metallicity, and kinematics using multi-wavelength photometry and spectroscopy.
Findings
FSR 1776 is an approximately 10 Gyr old, metal-rich globular cluster.
Located at about 7.24 kpc from the Sun in the Galactic bulge.
It has one of the highest metallicities among Galactic GCs.
Abstract
(ABRIDGED) Recent near-IR surveys have uncovered a plethora of new globular cluster (GC) candidates towards the Milky Way bulge. These new candidates need to be confirmed as real GCs and properly characterised. We investigate the physical nature of FSR 1776. This object was originally classified as an intermediate-age open cluster and has recently been re-discovered independently and classified as a GC candidate (Minni 23). Firstly, we aim at confirming its GC nature; secondly we determine its physical parameters. The confirmation of the cluster existence is checked using the radial velocity (RV) distribution of a MUSE data cube centred at FSR 1776. The cluster parameters are derived from isochrone fitting to the RV-cleaned colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) from visible and near-infrared photometry. The predicted RV distribution for the FSR 1776 coordinates, considering only…
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