The Gaia-ESO Survey: No sign of multiple stellar populations in open clusters from their sodium and oxygen abundances
A. Bragaglia (1), V. D'Orazi (2,3), L. Magrini (4), M. Baratella (5),, T. Bensby (6), S. Martell (7,8), S. Randich (4), G. Tautvaisiene (9), E.J., Alfaro (10), L. Morbidelli (4), R. Smiljanic (11), S. Zaggia (2) (1-INAF-OAS, Bologna, 2-INAF-OA Padova, 3-Uni. Tor. Vergata

TL;DR
This study uses Gaia-ESO data to investigate sodium and oxygen abundances in open clusters, finding no evidence of multiple stellar populations or abundance anti-correlations, supporting their status as single stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale homogeneous analysis of Na and O abundances in open clusters, confirming the absence of multiple populations in these systems.
Findings
Na abundances are consistent with a single population within errors.
No Na-O anti-correlation detected in any of the studied open clusters.
Small abundance spreads can be explained by evolutionary effects or analysis difficulties.
Abstract
Context: The light element (anti-)correlations shown by globular clusters (GCs) are the main spectroscopic signature of multiple stellar populations. These internal abundance variations provide us with fundamental constraints on the formation mechanism of stellar clusters. Aims: Using Gaia-ESO, the largest and most homogeneous survey of open clusters (OCs), we intend to check whether these stellar aggregates display the same patterns. Based on previous studies of many GCs, several young and massive clusters in the Magellanic Clouds, as well as a few OCs, we do not expect to find any anti-correlation, given the low mass of Milky Way OCs. Methods: We used the results based on UVES spectra of stars in Gaia-ESO to derive the distribution of Na and O abundances and seevwhether they show an unexplained dispersion or whether they are anti-correlated. By selecting only high-probability members…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
