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MODEST 6 -- Chicago, August 31, 2005 study of the environment effect on “canonical” evolutionary sequences the “creation” of ARTIFICIAL sequences as Blue Stragglers Stars and exotic objects by-products of binary systems UVE BSS have been detected for the first time by Sandage (1953) according to their position in the CMD, BSS should be more massive than normal stars merger of 2 low-mass stars unevolved, massive star primordial binaries BSS direct collisions crucial link between stellar evolution & stellar dynamics loose GGCs low c, low r0 high resolution studies BSS also in the inner region of high density GGCs natural habitat for BSS • NGC6397 Auriere et al. 1990 • 47 Tuc Paresce et al. 1991 • M15 Ferraro & Paresce 1993 <1990 >1990 Catalogs: Fusi Pecci et al. 1992 Sarajedini et al. 1992 Ferraro, Fusi Pecci, Bellazzini 1995 Guhathakurta et al. 1994, 1998 Piotto et al 2004 BSS are a normal population of GGCs, found in each cluster properly observed BSS are more concentrated than RGB stars exceptions: M3, M55,47 Tuc.. UV sensitivity , high resolution HST systematic studies of hot SPs in the core of high density GGCs UV-plane ideal to study the photometric properties of the BSS population: - the distribution is almost vertical - span more than 3 magnitudes M3 PHOT. PLATES (Buonanno et al 1994) HIGH RES. CCD (Ferraro et al 1993) HST IMAGES (Ferraro et al 1997) M3 : The first surprise The very first complete coverage of the entire the cluster extension BSS are more concentrated in the central region BSS are less concentrated in the external region R = RBSS RGB= Highly peaked in the center rapidly decreasing at intermediate radii and finally rising again at larger radii Is this distribution really “peculiar” & unique ? TOT TOT N / N NBSS / N RGB L LSS/L LTOT TOT Theany BSS radial distribution For not-segregated pop. is R BIMODAL =1 47 Tuc: another surprise!!!! The BSS radial distribution in 47 Tuc is quite similar to that observed in M3 Central peak & the Decreasing at intermediate radii ? collisional BSS kicked off from the cluster core or BSS generated by primordial binaries Dynamical simulations performed in the case of 47 Tuc (Mapelli et al 2004) showed that a pop. of PB is needed to reproduce the bimodal distribution Mass segregation & dynamical friction collisional BSS @ center & PB-BSS in the outer regions? Is this the “natural” BSS radial distribution? M55 Ferraro et al (1993,1997) 47 Tuc Ferraro et al (2004) Zaggia et al (1997) NGC6752 Sabbi et al (2004) Omega Centauri Ferraro et al, (2004),ApJ, 603,L81 v Centauri: NO evidence of mass segregation!!!! A pure population of non-collisional BSS? New catalog containing 3000 BSS in 56 GGCs from HST optical observations Piotto et al (2004) + Davies et al (2004) N(BSS) varies only a factor 10 !!! BSS are produced by both channels (collisions & binary evolution) Accordingly with previous suggestions by Fusi Pecci et al (1993), Baylin (1995), etc… The total number of BSS is independent of cluster mass and collision rate In more massive systems exchange encounters with a third more massive MS star “used up” PB early in the cluster history 1-2 : A more massive MS star exchanges into a MS-MS binary 3 : the primary evolves off the MS and fills its Roche lobe 4: the secondary gains mass from the primary becoming a BSS Davies et al (2004) suggested: Davies et al (2004) 1. This process was particulary active in the past in high-density clusters 2. most of the BSS generated by this channel have now evolved The number of BSS produced over the last 1 Gyr The number of BSS produced from primordial binaries decrease with cluster luminosity because they are already evolved The number of Collisional BSS increases with the cluster luminosity Davies et al (2004) Interesting working hypothesis but the scenario seems more complex…. Since the dynamical history of each cluster plays an important role NBSS must be normalized to the cluster population F= BSS specific frequency F = NBSS / NHB 305 BSS !! One of the largest population ever observed in a GGC The most concentrated BSS population ever found in a GGC Why M80 has such a huge population of BSS ? M80 is much more concentrated than M3 3 (Log r0 = 5.8 M</pc ) Could the dynamical evolution of the cluster play a role in the formation of BSS? BUT other clusters with similar concentration like 3 47 Tuc (Log r0 = 5.1 M</pc ) 3 NGC2808 (Log r0 = 5.0 M</pc ) 3 NGC6388 (Log r0 = 5.7 M</pc ) have many fewer BSS M80 is not a PCC but it should be !!!! its dynamical time scale is much shorter than its age ! BUT even the PCC state cannot explain such a huge BSS population (NBSS< 100) Are collisions delaying the core collapse and generating the BSS? twin clusters M3 M 13 3 3 Log r0 = 3.5 Ms/pc Log r0 = 3.4 Ms/pc Log M = 5.8 Ms Log M = 5.8 Ms NBSS = 72 NBSS = 16 F F = 0.28 clusters in different dynamical phases ? ? = 0.07 different primordial binary population ? Collapsing? Not-yet coll. NBSS = 17 NBSS = 129 F = 0.16 F = 0.44 – 1.0 binaries are preventing core collapse ? ? are binaries destroyed during the collapse ? Log r0 = 5.8 Ms/pc Log r0 = 2.1 Ms/pc NBSS = 129 NBSS = 24 3 F F = 0.44 = 0.92 !!! the largest specific frequency ever observed in one of the lowest density cluster F = 1 if only the PC is considered different types of BSS ? 3 ? NGC288 has a large fraction of binaries ! Bellazzini et al. 2002 AJ, 123, 1509 M3 & M92 M3, M13 & M10 • 2 GGCs without • 3 GGCs with HB tails long HB blue tails • similar b-BSS LF extending 2.5 mag brighter than • similar b-BSS LF extending <1.5 mag brighter than m255=19 m255=19 ? are the BSS photometric properties and HB morphology linked? M80 • b-BSS distribution in the UV-CMD Models by A. Sills: All Collisional BSS: generated by s-b interactions Binary fraction 20% BSS formation rate is constant or zero BSS distribution in the CMD depends on when the BSS are created Models are still too rough to properly reproduce the observations BSS formation has lasted over a relatively long period (5-2 Gyr) The existence of bright BSS could indicate triple systems ? Theoretical Predictions Models give controversial predictions on the resulting properties of a BSS formed via collision process: Collisional BSS show high rotational velocities Collisional BSS are not fast rotators (Leonard & Livio 1995) (Benz & Hills 1987) •Negligible mixing between inner cores and outer envelopes of colliding stars is expected (Lombardi et al. 1995) •Binary mass transfer is likely to create a fast rotating BSS and to lead an abundance pattern indicative of mixing with regions of incomplete CNburning (Sarna and de Greve 1996) These hypothesies have never been checked with observations!!! Looking for abundance signatures of the formation process……