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Seminars

Not-so-simple Stellar Populations in Local Group Star Clusters

Speaker Prof. Richard de Grijs
Affiliation Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University
Date July 3, 2014 (Thu)
Time 11:00 a.m.
Venue Room 522, 5/F, Chong Yuet Ming Physics Building, HKU

Abstract

Until about a decade ago, star clusters were considered "simple" stellar populations: all stars in a cluster were thought to have similar ages and the same metal abundances. Only the individual stellar masses were thought to vary, in essence conforming to a "universal" initial mass function. Over the past decade, this situation has changed dramatically. Yet, at the same time, star clusters are among the brightest stellar population components and, as such, they are visible out to much greater distances than individual stars, even the brightest, so that understanding the intricacies of star cluster composition and their evolution is imperative for understanding stellar populations and the evolution of galaxies as a whole. I will discuss my group's recent progress in this context, with particular emphasis on the properties and importance of binary systems, the effects of rapid stellar rotation, and the presence of multiple populations in Local Group star clusters across the full age range. Our very recent results imply a reverse paradigm shift, back to the old simple stellar population picture for at least some intermediate-age (~2 Gyr-old) star clusters, which opens up exciting avenues for future research directions.

Coffee and tea will be served 20 minutes prior to the seminar.