SCYON Abstract

Received on December 7 2009

The ACS Survey of Galactic Globular Clusters. IX. Horizontal Branch Morphology and the Second Parameter Phenomenon

AuthorsAaron Dotter, Ata Sarajedini, Jay Anderson, Antonio Aparicio, Luigi R. Bedin, Brian Chaboyer, Steven Majewski, A. MarĂ­n-Franch, Antonino Milone, Nathaniel Paust, Giampaolo Piotto, I. Neill Reid, Alfred Rosenberg, and Michael Siegel
AffiliationUniversity of Victoria, University of Florida, STScI, Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, STScI, Dartmouth College, University of Virginia, Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Universita di Padova, STScI, Universita di Padova, STScI, Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Penn State University
Accepted byAstrophysical Journal
Contactdotter@uvic.ca
URLhttp://arxiv.org/abs/0911.2469
Links

Abstract

The horizontal branch (HB) morphology of globular clusters (GCs) is most strongly influenced by metallicity. The second parameter phenomenon acknowledges that metallicity alone is not enough to describe the HB morphology of all GCs. In particular, the outer Galactic halo contains GCs with redder HBs at a given metallicity than are found inside the Solar circle. Thus, at least a second parameter is required to characterize HB morphology. Here we analyze the median color difference between the HB and the red giant branch (RGB), d(V-I), measured from HST ACS photometry of 60 GCs within ~20 kpc of the Galactic Center. Analysis of this homogeneous data set reveals that, after the influence of metallicity has been removed, the correlation between d(V-I) and age is stronger than that of any other parameter considered. Expanding the sample to include HST photometry of the 6 most distant Galactic GCs lends additional support to the correlation between d(V-I) and age. This result is robust with respect to the adopted metallicity scale and the method of age determination, but must bear the caveat that high quality, detailed abundance information is not available for a significant fraction of the sample. When a subset of GCs with similar metallicities and ages are considered, a correlation between d(V-I) and central luminosity density is exposed. With respect to the existence of GCs with anomalously red HBs at a given metallicity, we conclude that age is the second parameter and central density is most likely the third. Important problems related to HB morphology in GCs, notably multi-modal distributions and faint blue tails, remain to be explained.