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On the Horizontal Branch of the Galactic Globular NGC2808
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On the Horizontal Branch of the Galactic Globular NGC2808
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We present new UV (F218W) data for stars in the central region of the Galactic globular cluster NGC2808, collected with the WFPC2 camera on board of the Hubble Space Telescope. These data together with F439W and F555W-band data and previous ground based observations provide a multifrequency coverage of the cluster stellar population extending up to a distance of 1.7 times the cluster core radius. We discuss this complete sample of stars, which includes 764 Red Giant Branch (RGB) stars brighter than the Horizontal Branch (HB) luminosity level, 1239 HB stars, 119 Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB), and 22 AGB-manque' stellar structures. As already known, we find that blue HB stars separate into three distinct groups. However, our multiband photometry indicates that several stars in the two hotter HB groups show a flat spectrum, thus suggesting the binarity of these objects. Artificial star experiments suggest that at most 50% of them might be photometric blends. Moreover, at variance with previous claims one finds that canonical Zero Age Horizontal Branch (ZAHB) models do reach effective temperatures typical of observed hot HB stars. We also show that the ratio between HB and RGB stars brighter than the HB luminosity level steadly increases when moving from the cluster center to the periphery, passing from R=1.37 +/- 0.14 in the cluster core to R=1.95 +/- 0.26 in the outer cluster regions. We discuss the possible origin of such a radial gradient in the context of the Blue Tails phenomenon, advancing some suggestions concerning the clumpy stellar distribution along the HB.
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Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Multiple populations along the asymptotic giant branch: a Gaia+APOGEE study of 22 Galactic globular clusters
In nine of 22 globular clusters the most extreme second-population stars are underrepresented on the AGB relative to the RGB, with anomalous stars showing even stronger AGB-manqué signatures.
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