Hubble Space Telescope survey of Magellanic Cloud star clusters. Binaries among the split main sequences of NGC 1818, NGC 1850, and NGC 2164
Nearly all star clusters younger than ~600 Myr exhibit extended main sequence turn offs and split main sequences (MSs) in their color-magnitude diagrams. Works based on both photometry and spectroscopy have firmly demonstrated that the red MS is composed of fast-rotating stars, whereas blue MS stars...
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Zusammenfassung: | Nearly all star clusters younger than ~600 Myr exhibit extended main sequence
turn offs and split main sequences (MSs) in their color-magnitude diagrams.
Works based on both photometry and spectroscopy have firmly demonstrated that
the red MS is composed of fast-rotating stars, whereas blue MS stars are slow
rotators. Nevertheless, the mechanism responsible for the formation of stellar
populations with varying rotation rates remains a topic of debate. Potential
mechanisms proposed for the split MS include binary interactions, early
evolution of pre-main sequence stars, and the merging of binary systems, but a
general consensus has yet to be reached. These formation scenarios predict
different fractions of binaries among blue- and red-MS stars. Therefore,
studying the binary populations can provide valuable constraints that may help
clarify the origins of the split MSs. We use high-precision photometry from the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to study the binaries of three young Magellanic
star clusters exhibiting split MS, namely NGC 1818, NGC 1850, and NGC 2164. By
analyzing the photometry in the F225W, F275W, F336W, and F814W filters for
observed binaries and comparing it to a large sample of simulated binaries, we
determine the fractions of binaries within the red and the blue MS. We find
that the fractions of binaries among the blue MS are higher than those of
red-MS stars by a factor of ~1.5, 4.6, and ~1.9 for NGC 1818, NGC 1850, and NGC
2164, respectively. We discuss these results in the context of the formation
scenarios of the split MS. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.02508 |