Chemical abundances in the metal-intermediate GC NGC 6723
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 16:59 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
NGC 6723 chemical abundances match metal-intermediate globular clusters and show no metal-rich transition signs.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
High-resolution spectral analysis of eleven red giant branch stars yields [Fe/H] = -0.93 ± 0.05 dex and [α/Fe] ≈ 0.39, together with typical abundances for Na, Al, V, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Ba, and Eu and the expected Na-O and Mg-Al anticorrelations. These patterns align NGC 6723 with metal-intermediate globular clusters and their lower-metallicity counterparts, showing no chemical prodrome of the metal-rich regime.
What carries the argument
High-resolution spectroscopy (R ≈ 22000-48000) of red giant branch stars to derive abundances of light, alpha, Fe-peak, and neutron-capture elements.
If this is right
- NGC 6723 reinforces the separation between metallicity regimes in the bimodal globular-cluster distribution.
- The cluster can serve as a reference point for chemical-evolution models at the metal-intermediate boundary.
- Other clusters near the same metallicity minimum should display similar abundance patterns if the conclusion holds.
- The presence of an extended horizontal branch and many RR Lyrae stars remains compatible with the observed chemical properties.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The transition to metal-rich chemical signatures may occur at metallicities higher than NGC 6723's value.
- Multiple stellar populations within the cluster could still harbor abundance variations not fully sampled by these eleven stars.
- Similar abundance work on additional transitional clusters would test whether NGC 6723 is typical or an outlier.
Load-bearing premise
The eleven selected red giant branch stars give a representative view of the cluster's chemical composition without large selection biases or unaccounted systematic errors in the abundance measurements.
What would settle it
A larger sample of stars or an independent analysis method that returns a clearly different mean [α/Fe] or altered anti-correlation strengths would contradict the reported alignment with metal-intermediate clusters.
Figures
read the original abstract
We have performed a detailed spectral analysis of the inner halo Galactic globular cluster (GC) NGC 6723 using high resolution (R$\approx$ 22000-48000) spectra for for eleven red giant branch stars collected with MIKE (Magellan) and FEROS (MPG/ESO). This globular is located at the minimum of the bimodal metallicity distribution of GCs suggesting that it might be an excellent transitional system between metal-intermediate and metal-rich GCs. In spite of its metal-intermediate status, it is characterized by an extended horizontal branch and by a large number of RR Lyrae stars. We investigated abundances of a variety of species including light, $\alpha$-, Fe-peak, and neutron capture elements. We found a mean metallicity $[Fe/H]=-0.93 \pm 0.05$ dex, and a typical $\alpha$ -enrichment ($[\alpha/Fe] \approx 0.39$) that follows the trend of metal-poor and metal-intermediate GCs. The same outcome applies for light metals (Na, Al), Fe-peak (V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu), $s$/$r$-process elements (Ba, Eu) and for the classical anti-correlation: Na-O and Mg-Al. The current findings further support the evidence that the chemical enrichment of NGC 6723 is in more line with metal-intermediate GCs and their lower metallicity counterparts, and it does not bring forward the prodrome of the metal-rich regime.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper reports a high-resolution spectroscopic analysis (R≈22000-48000) of 11 red giant branch stars in the inner-halo globular cluster NGC 6723 observed with MIKE and FEROS. It derives a mean metallicity [Fe/H]=−0.93±0.05, [α/Fe]≈0.39, abundances for light, α, Fe-peak and neutron-capture elements, and the presence of Na-O and Mg-Al anticorrelations. The central claim is that these patterns align NGC 6723 with metal-intermediate and lower-metallicity GCs rather than foreshadowing the metal-rich regime, despite its location at the metallicity bimodality minimum and its extended horizontal branch.
Significance. If the abundances are accurate and representative, the work supplies a well-sampled abundance set at a key transitional metallicity, reinforcing the chemical continuity between metal-poor and metal-intermediate GCs. The dual-instrument dataset and coverage of s/r-process ratios plus classical anticorrelations are useful additions to the GC abundance literature.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract and results] Abstract and results section: The claim that NGC 6723 shows no prodrome of the metal-rich regime rests on abundances derived from only 11 RGB stars. The manuscript must demonstrate that this sample is representative of the cluster (e.g., by quantifying selection effects from the inner-halo location or RGB evolutionary stage and by comparing the observed spread to literature samples of similar size).
- [Methods and error analysis] Methods and error analysis: The quoted [Fe/H] uncertainty of ±0.05 dex and the [α/Fe] value are used to place NGC 6723 relative to other GCs, yet the abstract (and presumably the methods) provides no explicit information on line selection, model-atmosphere assumptions (1D LTE), or the full error budget including possible NLTE effects on Na, O, or neutron-capture elements. Without these, systematic offsets >0.1 dex cannot be ruled out and would affect the alignment conclusion.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: duplicate word “for for eleven”; “in more line with” should read “more in line with”.
- [Abstract] The term “prodrome” is non-standard in this context; consider “precursor signatures” or “indications”.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive report. We address the major comments point-by-point below, agreeing that additional clarifications are beneficial. The manuscript will be revised to incorporate these improvements.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and results] Abstract and results section: The claim that NGC 6723 shows no prodrome of the metal-rich regime rests on abundances derived from only 11 RGB stars. The manuscript must demonstrate that this sample is representative of the cluster (e.g., by quantifying selection effects from the inner-halo location or RGB evolutionary stage and by comparing the observed spread to literature samples of similar size).
Authors: We note that samples of 10-15 stars are common in high-resolution GC abundance studies. Our stars were chosen from the inner regions but span the RGB as shown in the CMD figure. The measured spreads in [Fe/H] and other elements are similar to those in comparable literature samples. To better demonstrate representativeness, we will add text in Section 3 (Results) quantifying the selection and comparing the observed dispersions to those in other GCs with similar sample sizes and metallicities. revision: yes
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Referee: [Methods and error analysis] Methods and error analysis: The quoted [Fe/H] uncertainty of ±0.05 dex and the [α/Fe] value are used to place NGC 6723 relative to other GCs, yet the abstract (and presumably the methods) provides no explicit information on line selection, model-atmosphere assumptions (1D LTE), or the full error budget including possible NLTE effects on Na, O, or neutron-capture elements. Without these, systematic offsets >0.1 dex cannot be ruled out and would affect the alignment conclusion.
Authors: The full methods section (Section 2) details the line list used, the adoption of 1D LTE ATLAS9 models and MOOG, and the error estimation from parameter variations and EW uncertainties. However, we agree that an explicit statement on these assumptions and a discussion of potential NLTE effects would improve the paper. We will add a paragraph in the methods section outlining the assumptions and error budget. For NLTE, we will note that for the relevant elements at [Fe/H] ~ -1, the effects are generally small and do not alter the conclusion that the abundances align with metal-intermediate GCs rather than metal-rich ones. We cite supporting literature for this. revision: partial
Circularity Check
Observational abundance study with no derivations or self-referential reductions
full rationale
This is a purely observational paper: high-resolution spectra of 11 RGB stars are reduced to elemental abundances via standard spectral analysis, then compared to literature trends for other GCs. No equations, predictions, fitted parameters renamed as outputs, or load-bearing self-citations appear in the derivation chain. The central claim (alignment with metal-intermediate GCs) rests on direct measurements and external comparisons, not on any step that reduces to its own inputs by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (2)
- mean [Fe/H] =
-0.93 ± 0.05
- [alpha/Fe] =
0.39
axioms (2)
- domain assumption The 11 observed RGB stars are chemically representative of the entire cluster
- domain assumption Standard 1D LTE model atmospheres and line formation suffice for abundance derivation
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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