Bibcode
Piatti, Andrés E.; Geisler, Doug; Sarajedini, Ata; Gallart, Carme; Wischnjewsky, Marina
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 389, Issue 1, pp. 429-440.
Advertised on:
9
2008
Citations
26
Refereed citations
23
Description
We present CCD photometry in the Washington system C and T1
passbands down to T1 ~ 22 in the fields of L35, L45, L49,
L50, L62, L63 and L85, seven poorly studied star clusters in the inner
region of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We measured T1
magnitudes and C - T1 colours for a total of 114826 stars
distributed throughout cluster areas of 13.7 ×
13.7arcmin2 each. Cluster radii were estimated from star
counts distributed throughout the entire observed fields. The seven
clusters are generally characterized by a relatively small angular size
and by a high field star contamination. We performed an in-depth
analysis of the field star contamination of the colour-magnitude
diagrams (CMDs), and statistically cleaned the cluster CMDs. Based on
the best fits of isochrones computed by the Padova group to the
(T1,C - T1) CMDs, we derive ages for the sample,
assuming Z = 0.004, finding ages between 25Myr and 1.2Gyr. We then
examined different relationships between positions in the SMC, age and
metallicity of a larger sample of clusters including our previous work
whose ages and metallicities are on the same scale used in this paper.
We confirm previous results in the sense that the further a cluster is
from the centre of the galaxy, the older and more metal poor it is, with
some dispersion; although clusters associated with the Magellanic Bridge
clearly do not obey the general trend. The number of clusters within ~
2° of the SMC centre appears to have increased substantially after
~2.5Gyr ago, hinting at a burst.
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