A Search for Old Star Clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Doug Geisler,Eduardo Luiz Damiani Bica,Horacio Alberto Dottori,Juan J. Clariá,Andrés E. Piatti,João F. C. Santos +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the first results of a color-magnitude diagram survey of 25 candidate old LMC clusters were reported, and the results suggest that there are few, if any, genuine old clusters in the LMC left to be found.
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Abstract: We report the first results of a color-magnitude diagram survey of 25 candidate old LMC clusters. For almost all of the sample, it was possible to reach the turnoff region, and in many clusters we have several magnitudes of the main sequence. Age estimates based on the magnitude difference $\delta T_1$ between the giant branch clump and the turnoff revealed that no new old clusters were found. The candidates turned out to be of intermediate age (1-3 Gyr) We show that the apparently old ages as inferred from integrated UBV colors can be explained by a combination of stochastic effects produced by bright stars and by photometric errors for faint clusters lying in crowded fields. The relatively metal poor candidates from the CaII triplet spectroscopy also turned out to be of intermediate age. This, combined with the fact that they lie far out in the disk, yields interesting constraints regarding the formation and evolution of the LMC disk. We also study the age distribution of intermediate age and old clusters This homogeneous set of accurate relative ages allows us to make an improved study of the history of cluster formation/destruction for ages $>1$Gyr. We confirm previous indications that there was apparently no cluster formation in the LMC during the period from 3-8 Gyr ago, and that there was a pronounced epoch of cluster formation beginning 3 Gyrs ago that peaked at about 1.5 Gyrs ago. Our results suggest that there are few, if any, genuine old clusters in the LMC left to be found.
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Citations
Testing intermediate-age stellar evolution models with VLT photometry of LMC clusters. II. Analysis with the Yale models
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the amount of convective core overshoot necessary to reproduce the CMDs of relatively metal-poor, intermediate age stellar populations, and conclude that a moderate amount of overshoot and some fraction of binary stars are essential for reproducing the observed shapes around the turnoff in all three intermediate-age LMC clusters.
On the physical nature of globular cluster candidates in the Milky Way bulge
TL;DR: In this article, the physical reality of recently reported globular cluster (GC) candidates in the Milky Way (MW) bulge has been analyzed using photometric membership probabilities that allowed us to distinguish real stellar aggregates from the composite field star population.
Spectroscopic analysis of the candidate globular clusters NGC 1928 and 1939 in the Large Magellanic Cloud
TL;DR: In this article, the integrated spectral properties in the range 3600-6700 of the candidate old clusters NGC 1928 and 1939 in the LMC bar are compared with those of old- and intermediate-age reference LMC clusters, the properties of which are better established.
Formation and evolution of the Magellanic Clouds. I.Origin of structural, kinematical, and chemical properties of the Large Magellanic Cloud
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the dynamical and chemical evolution of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) interacting with the Galaxy and the Small Magellan Cloud (SMC) based on a series of self-consistent chemodynamical simulations.
WFPC2 Observations of the Small Magellanic Cloud Intermediate-Age Populous Cluster NGC 416
Kenneth J. Mighell,Kenneth J. Mighell,Ata Sarajedini,Ata Sarajedini,Rica S. French,Rica S. French +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of archived Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 observations in F555W (~V) and F450W (~B) of the intermediate-age populous star cluster NGC 416 in the Small Magellanic Cloud galaxy is presented.
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