The effect of helium diffusion on the ages of globular clusters

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

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Gaseous Diffusion, Globular Clusters, Helium Atoms, Stellar Evolution, Stellar Interiors, Color-Magnitude Diagram, Halos, Milky Way Galaxy

Scientific paper

Evolutionary tracks for halo stars were calculated, and isochrones which include the effects of microscopic diffusion of helium were constructed. The isochrones were fitted to a metal poor (M92) and a moderately metal rich (NGC 288) globular cluster using an updated version of the Revised Yale Isochrone color calibration. Ages of the two clusters were also determined using the difference between the turnoff magnitude and horizontal branch magnitude, and the difference in color between the main-sequence turnoff and lower giant branch. Considering all methods and constraints, diffusion is argued to reduce the derived ages of M92 and NGC 288 by 0.5-1 Gyr. The maximum age reduction that diffusion could cause is 3 Gyr. Age estimates including diffusion indicate that M92 is 16 +/- 2 Gyr old, and that M92 is about 3 Gyr older than NGC 288, assuming that the clusters have the same O/Fe of +0.4.

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