http://arxiv.org/abs/1901.09584
Apparently similar but multifaceted photometric systems are currently being used to investigate the multiple stellar populations in globular clusters, without the concrete general agreement on the definition of the multiple populations. In recent years, an attractive idea of utilization of the widely used UBI photometry, C_{UBI}, for the populational tagging of the giant stars in globular clusters has been emerged. We perform a critical analysis of the cn_{JWL} and the C_{UBI} indices, finding that the populational tagging from the C_{UBI} index may not be reliable, due to the inherited trait of the broad-band photometry. As a consequence, the populational number ratios and the cumulative radial distributions from the C_{UBI} index can be easily in error. The results for M3, which shows a very strong radial gradient in the populational number ratio, highlights the strengths of our cn_{JWL} index: both the HST imaging and the ground-based spectroscopy failed to grasp the correct picture, that can be easily achieved with our cn_{JWL} index with small aperture ground-based telescopes, due to the small field of view or crowdedness in the central part of the cluster.
J. Jae-Woo
Tue, 29 Jan 19
27/62
Comments: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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