ArXiv TLDR

Photometric Metallicities for 367,324 stars of Omega Centauri

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2604.15103

Xue Lu, Haibo Yuan, Bowen Huang, Tao Wang, Timothy C. Beers

astro-ph.SRastro-ph.GA

TLDR

Researchers developed a method to derive photometric metallicities for over 367,000 stars in Omega Centauri, revealing insights into its stellar mixing.

Key contributions

  • Derived photometric metallicities for 367,324 Omega Centauri stars using HST colors and MUSE spectroscopy.
  • Achieved high precision: 0.10 dex for giants and 0.22 dex for fainter dwarfs.
  • Constructed a large catalog significantly extending the metallicity sample of Omega Centauri.
  • Revealed no significant metallicity gradient or irregular patterns, indicating well-mixed subpopulations.

Why it matters

This paper significantly expands the metallicity data for Omega Centauri, the most massive globular cluster. The new catalog and precise method offer a powerful tool for understanding stellar populations and evolution in complex clusters, applicable to other HST observations.

Original Abstract

Omega Centauri is the most massive and chemically complex multi-population globular cluster with a wide metallicity range that has been extensively studied photometrically and spectroscopically. Using the wide metallicity range of omega Cen, HST photometry (F275W, F336W, F435W, F625W), and MUSE spectroscopy ([M/H]), we derive [M/H]- and M_{F625W}-dependent stellar loci to estimate photometric metallicities from HST colors. Our tests yield metallicity precisions of 0.10\,dex for giants and 0.22\,dex for fainter dwarfs. We construct a photometric metallicity catalog from simultaneous F336W, F435W, and F625W observations (plus F275W where available), containing 20,778 giants and 346,546 dwarfs. A subsample of 20,533 giants is used to study the spatial metallicity distribution and gradient. We find no significant metallicity gradient within the half-light radius, consistent with previous work. Moreover, the previously reported ring-like structure is less pronounced in our data, and no physically significant, irregular two-dimensional metallicity pattern is detected, indicating that the stellar subpopulations are well mixed within the half-light radius. Our catalog significantly extends the metallicity sample of omega Cen, and this approach can be applied to other HST data to estimate photometric metallicities.

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