Hubble Space Telescope Observations of M32: The Color-Magnitude Diagram
Carl J. Grillmair (Caltech), Tod R. Lauer (NOAO), Guy Worthey, (University of Michigan), S. M. Faber (UCO/Lick Observatory), Wendy L., Freedman (OCIW), Barry F. Madore (IPAC), Edward A. Ajhar (NOAO), William A., Baum (University of Washington), Jon A. Holtzman (New Mexico State

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope data to analyze the stellar populations of M32, revealing a wide metallicity range, a dominant intermediate-age population, and challenging previous ground-based findings about bright asymptotic giant branch stars.
Contribution
First detailed HST color-magnitude diagram of M32 showing metallicity distribution and stellar ages, clarifying previous ground-based observational artifacts.
Findings
Wide metallicity distribution inconsistent with simple models
Dominant intermediate-age stellar population around 8.5 Gyr
No evidence for extended red horizontal branch
Abstract
We present a V-I color-magnitude diagram for a region 1'-2' from the center of M32 based on Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 images. The broad color-luminosity distribution of red giants shows that the stellar population comprises stars with a wide range in metallicity. This distribution cannot be explained by a spread in age. The blue side of the giant branch rises to M_I ~ -4.0 and can be fitted with isochrones having [Fe/H] ~ -1.5. The red side consists of a heavily populated and dominant sequence that tops out at M_I ~ -3.2, and extends beyond V-I=4. This sequence can be fitted with isochrones with -0.2 < [Fe/H] < +0.1, for ages running from 15 Gyr to 5 Gyr respectively. We do not find the optically bright asymptotic giant branch stars seen in previous ground-based work and argue that the majority of them were artifacts of crowding. Our results are consistent with the presence of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
