The chemical composition of globular clusters in the Local Group
S. S. Larsen (1), P. Eitner (2,3), E. Magg (3), M. Bergemann (3,4), C., A. S. Moltzer (1), J. P. Brodie (5,7), A. J. Romanowsky (6,7), J. Strader (8), ((1) Department of Astrophysics/IMAPP, Radboud University, (2), Ruprecht-Karls-Universitaet, Heidelberg, (3) MPIA, Heidelberg

TL;DR
This study provides detailed chemical abundance measurements for 45 globular clusters across the Local Group, revealing uniformity in their elemental patterns and insights into their early enrichment histories.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive high-resolution abundance analysis of GCs in several Local Group galaxies, including new constraints on their metal-poor populations.
Findings
GCs exhibit remarkably uniform abundance patterns across different galaxies.
Dwarf galaxy GCs are slightly less alpha-enhanced than those in larger galaxies.
No GCs show strongly enhanced r-process element abundances.
Abstract
We present detailed abundance measurements for 45 globular clusters (GCs) in galaxies in (and, in one case, beyond) the Local Group. The measurements are based on new high-resolution integrated-light spectra of GCs in NGC 185, NGC 205, M31, M33, and NGC 2403, combined with reanalysis of previous observations of GCs in the Fornax dSph, WLM, NGC 147, NGC 6822, and the Milky Way. The GCs cover the range -2.8 < [Fe/H] < -0.1 and we determined abundances for Fe, Na, Mg, Si, Ca, Sc, Ti, Cr, Mn, Ni, Cu, Zn, Zr, Ba, and Eu. Corrections for non local thermodynamic equilibrium effects are included for Na, Mg, Ca, Ti, Mn, Fe, Ni, and Ba. For several of the galaxies, our measurements provide the first quantitative constraints on the detailed composition of their metal-poor stellar populations. Overall, the GCs in different galaxies exhibit remarkably uniform abundance patterns of the alpha-,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
