NO EVIDENCE for MULTIPLE STELLAR POPULATIONS in the LOW-MASS GALACTIC GLOBULAR CLUSTER E3

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Abstract

Multiple stellar populations are a widespread phenomenon among Galactic globular clusters. Even though the origin of the enriched material from which new generations of stars are produced remains unclear, it is likely that self-enrichment will be feasible only in clusters massive enough to retain this enriched material. We searched for multiple populations in the low mass (M∼1.4X104MO) globular cluster E3, analyzing SOAR/Goodman multiobject spectroscopy centered on the blue cyanogen (CN) absorption features of 23 red giant branch stars. We find that the CN abundance does not present the typical bimodal behavior seen in clusters hosting multistellar populations, but rather a unimodal distribution that indicates the presence of a genuine single stellar population, or a level of enrichment much lower than in clusters that show evidence for two populations from high-resolution spectroscopy. E3 would be the first bona fide Galactic old globular cluster where no sign of self-enrichment is found.

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Salinas, R., & Strader, J. (2015). NO EVIDENCE for MULTIPLE STELLAR POPULATIONS in the LOW-MASS GALACTIC GLOBULAR CLUSTER E3. Astrophysical Journal, 809(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/809/2/169

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