4.7 Article

Blue straggler stars: A direct comparison of star counts and population ratios in six galactic globular clusters

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 588, Issue 1, Pages 464-477

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/374042

Keywords

binaries : close; blue stragglers; globular clusters : individual (M3, M10, M13, M80, M92, NGC 288); stars : evolution

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The central regions of six Galactic globular clusters (GGCs) (M3, M80, M10, M13, M92, and NGC 288) have been imaged using HST-WFPC2 and the ultraviolet filters (F255W and F336W). The selected sample covers a large range in both central density (log rho(0)) and metallicity ([Fe/H]). In this paper, we present a direct cluster-to-cluster comparison of the blue straggler star (BSS) population as selected from (m(255), m(255)-m(336)) color magnitude diagrams. We have found (1) that BSSs in three of the clusters ( M3, M80, M92) are much more concentrated toward the center of the cluster than the red giants; because of the smaller BSS samples for the other clusters, we can only note that the BSS radial distributions are consistent with central concentration; and (2) that the specific frequency of BSSs varies greatly from cluster to cluster. The most interesting result is that the two clusters with largest BSS specific frequency are at the central density extremes of our sample: NGC 288 ( lowest central density) and M80 ( highest). This evidence, together with the comparison with theoretical collisional models, suggests that both stellar interactions in high-density cluster cores and at least one other alternate channel operating in low-density GGCs play an important role in the production of BSSs. We also note a possible connection between horizontal-branch morphology and blue straggler luminosity functions in these six clusters.

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