Gaia-ESO Survey: Detailed elemental abundances in red giants of the peculiar globular cluster NGC 1851
G. Tautvaisiene, A. Drazdauskas, A. Bragaglia, S. L. Martell, E., Pancino, C. Lardo, S. Mikolaitis, R. Minkeviciute, E. Stonkute, M. Ambrosch,, V. Bagdonas, Y. Chorniy, N. Sanna, E. Franciosini, R. Smiljanic, S. Randich,, G. Gilmore, T. Bensby, M. Bergemann, A. Gonneau

TL;DR
This study analyzes the elemental abundances in red giants of NGC 1851 to understand its formation history, revealing two populations with similar A(C+N+O) but different metallicities and ages, supporting a dwarf galaxy origin.
Contribution
First detailed chemical abundance analysis of NGC 1851's giants showing two populations with similar A(C+N+O), providing insights into its formation and accretion history.
Findings
Two stellar populations with different metallicities and ages.
No significant difference in A(C+N+O) between populations.
Supports formation in an accreted dwarf galaxy.
Abstract
Context. NGC 1851 is one of several globular clusters for which multiple stellar populations of the subgiant branch have been clearly identified and a difference in metallicity detected. A crucial piece of information on the formation history of this cluster can be provided by the sum of A(C+N+O) abundances. However, these values have lacked a general consensus thus far. The separation of the subgiant branch can be based on age and/or A(C+N+O) abundance differences. Aims. Our main aim was to determine carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen abundances for evolved giants in the globular cluster NGC1851 in order to check whether or not the double populations of stars are coeval. Methods. High-resolution spectra, observed with the FLAMES-UVES spectrograph on the ESO VLT telescope, were analysed using a differential model atmosphere method. Results. We provide abundances of up to 29 chemical elements…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies
