Bibcode
DOI
De Angeli, Francesca; Piotto, Giampaolo; Cassisi, Santi; Busso, Giorgia; Recio-Blanco, Alejandra; Salaris, Maurizio; Aparicio, Antonio; Rosenberg, Alfred
Bibliographical reference
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 130, Issue 1, pp. 116-125.
Advertised on:
7
2005
Citations
196
Refereed citations
171
Description
We present accurate relative ages for a sample of 55 Galactic globular
clusters. The ages have been obtained by measuring the difference
between the horizontal branch and the turnoff in two internally
photometrically homogeneous databases. The mutual consistency of the two
data sets has been assessed by comparing the ages of 16 globular
clusters in common between the two databases. We have also investigated
the consistency of our relative age determination within the recent
stellar model framework. All clusters with [Fe/H]<-1.7 are found to
be old and coeval, with the possible exception of two objects, which are
marginally younger. The age dispersion for the metal-poor clusters is
0.6 Gyr (rms), consistent with a null age dispersion.
Intermediate-metallicity clusters (-1.7<[Fe/H]<-0.8) are on
average 1.5 Gyr younger than the metal-poor ones, with an age dispersion
of 1.0 Gyr (rms) and a total age range of ~3 Gyr. About 15% of the
intermediate-metallicity clusters are coeval with the oldest clusters.
All the clusters with [Fe/H]>-0.8 are ~1 Gyr younger than the most
metal-poor ones, with a relatively small age dispersion, although the
metal-rich sample is still too small to allow firmer conclusions. There
is no correlation of the cluster age with the galactocentric distance.
We briefly discuss the implication of these observational results for
the formation history of the Galaxy.
Based on observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained
at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the
Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA
contract NAS 5-26555, and on observations made at the European Southern
Observatory, La Silla, Chile, and with the Isaac Newton Group
Telescopes.