Bibcode
Marín-Franch, A.; Cassisi, Santi; Aparicio, A.; Pietrinferni, Adriano
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 714, Issue 2, pp. 1072-1080 (2010).
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5
2010
Journal
Citations
12
Refereed citations
11
Description
The impact that unrecognized differences in the chemical patterns of
Galactic globular clusters (GGCs) have on their relative age
determinations is studied. The two most widely used relative age-dating
methods, horizontal and vertical, together with the more recent relative
MS-fitting method, were carefully analyzed on a purely theoretical
basis. The BaSTI library was adopted to perform the present analysis. We
find that relative ages derived using the horizontal and vertical
methods are largely dependent on the initial He content and heavy
element distribution. Unrecognized cluster-to-cluster chemical abundance
differences can lead to an error in the derived relative ages as large
as ~0.5 (or ~6 Gyr if an age of 12.8 Gyr is adopted for normalization)
and even larger for some extreme cases. It is shown that the relative
MS-fitting method is by far the age-dating technique for which
undetected cluster-to-cluster differences in the He abundance have less
impact. Present results are used in order to pose constraints on the
maximum possible spread in the He and CNONa elements abundances on the
basis of the estimates—taken from the literature—of the GGCs
relative age dispersion obtained with the various relative age-dating
techniques. Finally, it is shown that the age-metallicity relation found
for young GGCs by the GC Treasury program is a real age sequence and
cannot be produced by variations in the He and/or heavy element
distribution.
Related projects
Milky Way and Nearby Galaxies
The general aim of the project is to research the structure, evolutionary history and formation of galaxies through the study of their resolved stellar populations, both from photometry and spectroscopy. The group research concentrates in the most nearby objects, namely the Local Group galaxies including the Milky Way and M33 under the hypothesis
Martín
López Corredoira