Star Counts in the Globular Cluster ω Centauri. I. Bright Stellar Components
Open Access
- 10 July 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 663 (2) , 1021-1039
- https://doi.org/10.1086/518209
Abstract
We present a photometric investigation on HB, RGB, and MSTO stars in ω Cen=NGC 5139. The center of the cluster was covered with a mosaic of F435W, F625W, and F658N band data collected with HST ACS. The outer reaches were covered with a mosaic of U-, B-, V-, and I-band data collected with the 2.2 m ESO/MPI telescope. The final catalog includes ~1.7 million stars. We identified more than 3200 likely HB stars, the largest sample ever collected in a globular cluster. We found that the HB morphology changes with the radial distance from the cluster center. The relative number of extreme HB stars decreases from ~30% to ~21% when moving from the center toward the outer reaches of the cluster, while the fraction of less hot HB stars increases from ~62% to ~72%. The comparison between theory and observations indicates that the empirical star counts of HB stars are on average larger (30%-40%) than predicted by canonical evolutionary models. Moreover, the rate of HB stars is ~43% larger than the MSTO rate. We also compared theory and observations by assuming a mix of stellar populations made with 70% of canonical He (Y = 0.23) stars and 30% of He-enhanced (Y = 0.33, 0.42) stars. We found that the observed RG/MSTO ratio agrees with the predicted lifetimes of He-mixed stellar populations. The discrepancy between theory and observations decreases by a factor of 2 when compared with rates predicted by canonical He content models, but still 15%-25% (Y = 0.42) and 15%-20% (Y = 0.33) higher than observed. Furthermore, the ratios between HB and MSTO star counts are ~24% (Y = 0.42) and 30% (Y = 0.33) larger than predicted lifetime ratios.Keywords
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