The Unusual Luminosity Function of the Globular Cluster M10
- 1 August 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 628 (2) , 729-737
- https://doi.org/10.1086/430872
Abstract
We present the I-band luminosity function of the differentially reddened globular cluster M10. We combine photometric analysis derived from wide-field (23' × 23') images that include the outer regions of the cluster and high-resolution images of the cluster core. After making corrections for incompleteness and field star contamination, we find that the relative numbers of stars on the lower giant branch and near the main-sequence turnoff are in good agreement with theoretical predictions. However, we detect significant (>6 σ) excesses of red giant branch stars above and below the red giant branch bump using a new statistic (a population ratio) for testing relative evolutionary timescales of main-sequence and red giant stars. The statistic is insensitive to assumed cluster chemical composition, age, and main-sequence mass function. The excess number of red giants cannot be explained by reasonable systematic errors in our assumed cluster chemical composition, age, or main-sequence mass function. Moreover, M10 shows excesses when compared to the cluster M12, which has nearly identical metallicity, age, and color-magnitude diagram morphology. We discuss possible reasons for this anomaly, finding that the most likely cause is a mass function slope that shows significant variations as a function of mass.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Luminosity Function and Color‐Magnitude Diagram of the Globular Cluster M12The Astrophysical Journal, 2004
- Chemical Abundances and Rotation Velocities of Blue Horizontal‐Branch Stars in Six Globular ClustersThe Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 2003
- Models for Old, Metal‐poor Stars with Enhanced α‐Element Abundances. III. Isochrones and Isochrone Population FunctionsThe Astrophysical Journal, 2001
- Distances, Ages, and Epoch of Formation of Globular ClustersThe Astrophysical Journal, 2000
- The Giant, Horizontal, and Asymptotic Branches of Galactic Globular Clusters. I. The Catalog, Photometric Observables, and FeaturesThe Astronomical Journal, 1999
- Space Velocities of Globular Clusters. III. Cluster Orbits and Halo SubstructureThe Astronomical Journal, 1999
- Globular Cluster Photometry with the [ITAL]Hubble[/ITAL] [ITAL]Space[/ITAL] [ITAL]T[/ITAL][ITAL]elescope[/ITAL]. VII. Color Gradients and Blue Stragglers in the Central Region of M30 from Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 ObservationsThe Astronomical Journal, 1998
- Abundances for globular cluster giants. I. Homogeneous metallicities for 24 clustersAstronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series, 1997
- Luminosity Functions for Post-Turnoff Stars in Globular Clusters. II. NGC 7099The Astronomical Journal, 1996
- The luminosity function for stars with minus 0.6 less than or equal to M [SUB]nu[/SUB] less than or equal to 6.5 in the globular cluster M30: Is there a problem with stellar evolution models?The Astrophysical Journal, 1994