Multiple Stellar Populations in Globular Clusters with JWST: a NIRCam view of 47 Tucanae
A. P. Milone, A. F. Marino, A. Dotter, T. Ziliotto, E. Dondoglio, G., Cordoni, S. Jang, E. P. Lagioia, M. V. Legnardi, A. Mohandasan, M. Tailo, D., Yong, S. Baimukhametova, M. Carlos

TL;DR
This study utilizes JWST and HST imaging to analyze multiple stellar populations in the low-mass main sequence of 47 Tucanae, revealing chemical diversity and population structure among M-dwarfs.
Contribution
It introduces a chromosome map for M-dwarfs in 47 Tucanae and identifies optimal photometric bands for studying multiple populations in globular clusters.
Findings
Multiple populations of M-dwarfs are identified in 47 Tucanae.
Photometric bands are optimized for investigating stellar populations.
Chemical composition constraints align with spectroscopic data.
Abstract
We use images collected with the near-infrared camera (NIRCam) on board the James Webb Space Telescope and with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to investigate multiple populations at the bottom of the main sequence (MS) of 47 Tucanae. The F115W vs. F115W-F322W2 CMD from NIRCam shows that, below the knee, the MS stars span a wide color range, where the majority of M-dwarfs exhibit blue colors, and a tail of stars are distributed toward the red. A similar pattern is observed from the F160W vs. F110W-F160W CMD from HST, and multiple populations of M-dwarfs are also visible in the optical F606W vs. F606W-F814W CMD. The NIRCam CMD shows a narrow sequence of faint MS stars with masses smaller than 0.1 solar masses. We introduce a chromosome map of M-dwarfs that reveals an extended first population and three main groups of second-population stars. By combining isochrones and synthetic spectra…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
