A deep dive into the Type II Globular Cluster NGC 1851
E. Dondoglio, A. P. Milone, A. F. Marino, F. D'Antona, G. Cordoni, M., V. Legnardi, E. P. Lagioia, S. Jang, T. Ziliotto, M. Carlos, F. Dell'Agli, A., Karakas, A. Mohandasan, Z. Osborn, M. Tailo, P. Ventura

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed analysis of the stellar populations in the Type II globular cluster NGC 1851, revealing distinct chemical compositions, spatial distributions, and sub-population structures using multi-source photometry.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive characterization of NGC 1851's populations, identifying chemical differences and spatial distributions, and clarifies the structure of its stellar halo.
Findings
Two distinct populations with different s-process element abundances identified.
Anomalous population has higher overall CNO abundance than canonical.
No significant radial segregation between populations, but chemical extremes are more centrally concentrated.
Abstract
About one-fifth of the Galactic globular clusters (GCs), dubbed Type II GCs, host distinct stellar populations with different heavy elements abundances. NGC 1851 is one of the most studied Type II GCs, surrounded by several controversies regarding the spatial distribution of its populations and the presence of star-to-star [Fe/H], C+N+O, and age differences. This paper provides a detailed characterization of its stellar populations through Hubble Space Telescope (HST), ground-based, and Gaia photometry. We identified two distinct populations with different abundances of s-process elements along the red-giant branch (RGB) and the sub-giant branch (SGB) and detected two sub-populations among both s-poor (canonical) and s-rich (anomalous) stars. To constrain the chemical composition of these stellar populations, we compared observed and simulated colors of stars with different abundances…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
