Cargando…

The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?

We review five independent techniques which are used to set the distance scale to globular clusters, giving most weight to subdwarf main sequence fitting utilizing Hipparcos parallax results. These data indicate that globular clusters are farther away than previously believed, implying a reduction i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chaboyer, Brian, Demarque, P., Kernan, Peter J., Krauss, Lawrence M.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1086/305201
http://cds.cern.ch/record/327817
_version_ 1780890998463791104
author Chaboyer, Brian
Demarque, P.
Kernan, Peter J.
Krauss, Lawrence M.
author_facet Chaboyer, Brian
Demarque, P.
Kernan, Peter J.
Krauss, Lawrence M.
author_sort Chaboyer, Brian
collection CERN
description We review five independent techniques which are used to set the distance scale to globular clusters, giving most weight to subdwarf main sequence fitting utilizing Hipparcos parallax results. These data indicate that globular clusters are farther away than previously believed, implying a reduction in age estimates. This new distance scale estimate is combined with a detailed numerical Monte Carlo study designed to assess the uncertainty associated with the theoretical age-turnoff luminosity relationship in order to estimate both the absolute age and uncertainty in age of the oldest globular clusters. Our best estimate for the mean age of the oldest globular clusters is now $11.7\pm 1.4 $Gyr, with a one-sided, 95% confidence level lower limit of 9.6 Gyr. This now provides a lower limit on the age of the universe which is consistent with either an open universe, or a flat, matter dominated universe (the latter requiring $H_0 \le 66 \kmsmpc$). Simple formulae are provided which can be used to update our age estimate as improved determinations for various quantities become available. Formulae are also provided which can be used to derive the age and its uncertainty for a globular cluster, given the absolute magnitude of the turn-off, or the point on the subgiant branch 0.05 mag redder than the turn-off.
id cern-327817
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 1997
record_format invenio
spelling cern-3278172023-03-14T20:10:09Zdoi:10.1086/305201http://cds.cern.ch/record/327817engChaboyer, BrianDemarque, P.Kernan, Peter J.Krauss, Lawrence M.The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?Astrophysics and AstronomyWe review five independent techniques which are used to set the distance scale to globular clusters, giving most weight to subdwarf main sequence fitting utilizing Hipparcos parallax results. These data indicate that globular clusters are farther away than previously believed, implying a reduction in age estimates. This new distance scale estimate is combined with a detailed numerical Monte Carlo study designed to assess the uncertainty associated with the theoretical age-turnoff luminosity relationship in order to estimate both the absolute age and uncertainty in age of the oldest globular clusters. Our best estimate for the mean age of the oldest globular clusters is now $11.7\pm 1.4 $Gyr, with a one-sided, 95% confidence level lower limit of 9.6 Gyr. This now provides a lower limit on the age of the universe which is consistent with either an open universe, or a flat, matter dominated universe (the latter requiring $H_0 \le 66 \kmsmpc$). Simple formulae are provided which can be used to update our age estimate as improved determinations for various quantities become available. Formulae are also provided which can be used to derive the age and its uncertainty for a globular cluster, given the absolute magnitude of the turn-off, or the point on the subgiant branch 0.05 mag redder than the turn-off.We review five independent techniques which are used to set the distance scale to globular clusters, including subdwarf main sequence fitting utilizing the recent Hipparcos parallax catalogue. These data together all indicate that globular clusters are farther away than previously believed, implying a reduction in age estimates. This new distance scale estimate is combined with a detailed numerical Monte Carlo study designed to assess the uncertainty associated with the theoretical age-turnoff luminosity relationship in order to estimate both the absolute age and uncertainty in age of the oldest globular clusters. Our best estimate for the mean age of the oldest globular clusters is now $11.5\pm 1.3 $Gyr, with a one-sided, 95% confidence level lower limit of 9.5 Gyr. This represents a systematic shift of over 2 $\sigma$ compared to our earlier estimate, due completely to the new distance scale---which we emphasize is not just due to the Hipparcos data. This now provides a lower limit on the age of the universe which is consistent with either an open universe, or a flat, matter dominated universe (the latter requiring $H_0 \le 67 \kmsmpc$). Our new study also explicitly quantifies how remaining uncertainties in the distance scale and stellar evolution models translate into uncertainties in the derived globular cluster ages. Simple formulae are provided which can be used to update our age estimate as improved determinations for various quantities become available.astro-ph/9706128CERN-TH-97-121CWRU-P4-97CWRU-97-4CERN-TH-97-121oai:cds.cern.ch:3278171997-06-16
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Chaboyer, Brian
Demarque, P.
Kernan, Peter J.
Krauss, Lawrence M.
The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
title The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
title_full The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
title_fullStr The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
title_full_unstemmed The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
title_short The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
title_sort age of globular clusters in light of hipparcos: resolving the age problem?
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1086/305201
http://cds.cern.ch/record/327817
work_keys_str_mv AT chaboyerbrian theageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT demarquep theageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT kernanpeterj theageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT krausslawrencem theageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT chaboyerbrian ageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT demarquep ageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT kernanpeterj ageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem
AT krausslawrencem ageofglobularclustersinlightofhipparcosresolvingtheageproblem