A Census of Above-Horizontal-Branch Stars in Galactic Globular Clusters
Brian D. Davis (1), Howard E. Bond (1, 2), Michael H. Siegel (1),, Robin Ciardullo (1) ((1) Pennsylvania State University, (2) Space Telescope, Science Institute)

TL;DR
This study catalogs 438 above-horizontal-branch stars in 104 globular clusters, classifying their evolutionary stages and confirming their cluster membership using Gaia data, thereby enhancing understanding of post-HB stellar evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive catalog of AHB stars across multiple clusters, with detailed classification and evolutionary context, using optimized photometry and Gaia astrometry.
Findings
Identified 438 AHB stars in 97 Galactic and 7 Magellanic Cloud clusters.
Confirmed cluster membership and classified stars into three evolutionary groups.
Found correlations between AHB types and cluster properties, supporting evolutionary models.
Abstract
We have carried out a search for above-horizontal-branch (AHB) stars--objects lying above the horizontal branch (HB) and blueward of the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) in the color-magnitude diagram--in 97 Galactic and seven Magellanic Cloud globular clusters (GCs). We selected AHB candidates based on photometry in the system, which is optimized for detection of low-gravity stars with large Balmer jumps, in the color range . We then used astrometry and Gaussian-mixture modeling to confirm cluster membership and remove field interlopers. Our final catalog contains 438 AHB stars, classified and interpreted in the context of post-HB evolution as follows: (1) AHB1: 280 stars fainter than , evolving redward from the blue HB (BHB) toward the base of the AGB. (2) Post-AGB (PAGB): 13 stars brighter than , departing from the top of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Educational Leadership and Practices
