2008ApJ...689.1020Y


Query : 2008ApJ...689.1020Y

2008ApJ...689.1020Y - Astrophys. J., 689, 1020-1030 (2008/December-3)

Chemical abundances in giants stars of the tidally disrupted globular cluster NGC 6712 from high-resolution infrared spectroscopy.

YONG D., MELENDEZ J., CUNHA K., KARAKAS A.I., NORRIS J.E. and SMITH V.V.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present abundances of C, N, O, F, Na, and Fe in six giant stars of the tidally disrupted globular cluster NGC 6712. The abundances were derived by comparing synthetic spectra with high-resolution infrared spectra obtained with the Phoenix spectrograph on the Gemini South telescope. We find large star-to-star abundance variations of the elements C, N, O, F, and Na. NGC 6712 and M4 are the only globular clusters in which F has been measured in more than two stars, and both clusters reveal F abundance variations whose amplitude is comparable to or exceeds that of O, a pattern which may be produced in M≳5 M AGB stars. Within the limited samples, the F abundance in globular clusters is lower than in field and bulge stars at the same metallicity. NGC 6712 and Pal 5 are tidally disrupted globular clusters whose red giant members exhibit O and Na abundance variations not seen in comparable metallicity field stars. Therefore, globular clusters such as NGC 6712 and Pal 5 cannot contribute many field stars and/or field stars do not form in environments with chemical enrichment histories like those of NGC 6712 and Pal 5. Although our sample size is small, from the amplitude of the O and Na abundance variations we infer a large initial cluster mass and tentatively confirm that NGC 6712 was once one of the most massive globular clusters in our Galaxy.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Galaxy: Abundances - globular clusters: individual (NGC 6712) - Stars: Abundances

Simbad objects: 19

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Number of rows : 19
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 104 GlC 00 24 05.359 -72 04 53.20     4.09     ~ 3920 0
2 NGC 5139 GlC 13 26 47.28 -47 28 46.1           ~ 3431 0
3 NAME Serpens Dwarf GlC 15 16 05.30 -00 06 41.0   15.1       ~ 736 1
4 M 4 GlC 16 23 35.22 -26 31 32.7           ~ 1854 0
5 M 13 GlC 16 41 41.634 +36 27 40.75     5.8     ~ 2195 0
6 BMB 78 AB* 18 03 15.5330344680 -29 51 10.314201996           M5 14 0
7 Cl* NGC 6712 SAW V10 LP* 18 52 57.3346578504 -08 41 43.865673756   15.74 13.68   11.27 ~ 14 0
8 V* MN Sct LP* 18 52 58.7862962736 -08 42 06.069083940     13.58 13.025 11.26 ~ 11 1
9 Cl* NGC 6712 SAW V32 LP* 18 52 59.3126465664 -08 41 34.565986320   15.61 13.72   11.56 ~ 7 0
10 NGC 6712 GlC 18 53 04.32 -08 42 21.5           ~ 520 0
11 V* MR Sct Mi* 18 53 05.6504165616 -08 41 12.274524312   15.24 13.32   10.90 M 20 0
12 Cl* NGC 6712 LM 8 * 18 53 06.9094192368 -08 40 54.208720992   15.67 13.78     ~ 5 0
13 2MASS J18530937-0843127 LP* 18 53 09.3783048456 -08 43 12.723576744   15.44 13.66   11.79 ~ 9 0
14 M 54 GlC 18 55 03.33 -30 28 47.5           ~ 1070 0
15 NAME SDG G 18 55 19.0 -30 32 43   4.5 3.6     ~ 2193 2
16 NGC 6752 GlC 19 10 52.11 -59 59 04.4           ~ 2002 0
17 * 34 Vul PM* 21 21 04.3938814104 +23 51 21.486740544   6.62   4.9   K1III 122 0
18 HD 206642 PM* 21 44 29.4723514080 -38 33 09.101246328   7.418 6.283     K1IIICNIV/V 42 0
19 NAME Galactic Bulge reg ~ ~           ~ 4306 0

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