Fast rotating Blue Straggler Stars in the Globular Cluster NGC3201
Alex Billi, Francesco R. Ferraro, Alessio Mucciarelli, Barbara, Lanzoni, Mario Cadelano, Lorenzo Monaco, Mario Mateo, John I. Bailey III,, Megan Reiter, Edward W. Olszewski

TL;DR
This study measures the rotational velocities of Blue Straggler Stars in NGC 3201, revealing a significant fraction of fast rotators, which suggests recent formation from binary systems in a low-density environment.
Contribution
First measurement of BSS rotational velocities in NGC 3201, showing a high percentage of fast rotators and supporting binary evolution scenarios in low-density clusters.
Findings
28% of BSSs are fast rotators (>40 km/s)
Rotational velocity decreases with luminosity and temperature
Higher fraction of fast rotators compared to high-density clusters
Abstract
We used high resolution spectra acquired at the Magellan Telescope to measure radial and rotational velocities of approximately 200 stars in the Galactic globular cluster NGC 3201. The surveyed sample includes Blue Stragglers Stars (BSSs) and reference stars in different evolutionary stages (main sequence turn-off, sub-giant, red giant and asymptotic giant branches). The average radial velocity value ( km s) confirms a large systemic velocity for this cluster and was used to distinguish 33 residual field interlopers. The final sample of member stars counts 67 BSSs and 114 reference stars. Similarly to what is found in other clusters, the totality of the reference stars has negligible rotation ( km s), while the BSS rotational velocity distribution shows a long tail extending up to km s, with 19 BSSs (out of 67)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
