Bibcode
Pancino, E.; Rejkuba, M.; Zoccali, M.; Carrera, R.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 524, id.A44
Advertised on:
12
2010
Journal
Citations
87
Refereed citations
77
Description
Context. Globular clusters show star-to-star abundance variations for
light elements that are not yet well understood. The preferred
explanation involves a self-enrichment scenario, within which two
subsequent generations of stars co-exist in globular clusters.
Observations of chemical abundances in the main sequence and sub-giant
branch stars allow us to investigate the signature of this chemically
processed material without the complicating effects caused by stellar
evolution and internal mixing. Aims: Our main goal is to
investigate the carbon-nitrogen anti-correlation with low-resolution
spectroscopy of 20-50 stars fainter than the first dredge-up in seven
Galactic globular clusters (NGC 288, NGC 1851, NGC 5927, NGC 6352, NGC
6388, and Pal 12) with different properties. We complemented our
observations with 47 Tuc archival data, with four additional clusters
from the literature (M 15, M 22, M 55, NGC 362), and with additional
literature data on NGC 288. Methods: In this first paper, we
measured the strengh of the CN and CH band indices, which correlate with
the N and C abundances, and we investigated the anti-correlation and
bimodality of these indices. We compared rCN, the ratio of
stars belonging to the CN-strong and weak groups, with 15 different
cluster parameters. Results: We clearly see bimodal
anti-correlation of the CH and CN band stregths in the metal-rich
clusters (Pal 12, 47 Tuc, NGC 6352, NGC 5927). Only M 15 among the
metal-poor clusters shows a clearly bimodal anti-correlation. We found
weak correlations (sligthly above 1σ) of rCN with the
cluster orbital parameters, present-day total mass, cluster
concentration, and age. Conclusions: Our findings support the
self-enrichment scenario, and suggest that the occurrence of more than
two major generations of stars in a GGC should be rare. Small additional
generations (<10-20% of the total) would be difficult to detect with
our samples. The first generation, which corresponds to the CN-weak
stars, usually contains more stars than the second one
( = 0.82±0.29), as opposed to results based
on the Na-O anti-correlations.
Based on FORS observations collected at the European Southern
Observatory, Chile, within the observing programs 68.D-0510 and
69.D-0056. Also based on data obtained from the ESO Archive, within the
observing program 67.D-0153.Complete Table 2 is only available in
electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/524/A44
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