Deriving physical parameters of unresolved star clusters. VIII. Limits of aperture photometry for star cluster studies
Karolis Daugevi\v{c}ius, Eimantas Kri\v{s}\v{c}i\=unas, Erikas Cic\.enas, Rima Stonkut\.e, and Vladas Vansevi\v{c}ius

TL;DR
This study assesses the limits of aperture photometry for star cluster analysis, highlighting its accuracy constraints, especially for young clusters and the impact of viewing angles, and suggests alternative methods for certain cases.
Contribution
It systematically evaluates the accuracy and applicability limits of aperture photometry in star cluster studies using simulated data and provides guidelines for reliable parameter determination.
Findings
Aperture size larger than half-light radius improves parameter accuracy.
Young clusters (~10 Myr) are difficult to analyze with aperture photometry.
Viewing angle introduces up to 0.1 mag uncertainty in colour indices.
Abstract
Recently, it has been noticed that the discrepancies in the integrated colour indices (CIs) between star clusters and models are mostly due to the projection of bright stars in the apertures. In order to reduce this problem, the method of adaptive aperture photometry has been proposed. This method has been applied to star clusters from the M 31 Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT) survey, and studies show that the adaptive aperture photometry performs better than the conventional approach. The aim of this study is to determine the best achievable limits on the accuracy and applicability of the aperture photometry method for studying star clusters in the local Universe. We computed a large network of artificial 3D star clusters spanning the parameter space of the M 31 clusters. We then simulated images of these clusters by projecting each onto a 2D plane from 100 directions.…
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