GeminiFocus 2015 Year in Review | Page 26

Figure 5. (above) This color-magnitude diagram of globular cluster NGC 1851’s crowded center combines near-infrared observations obtained using GeMS/ GSAOI at Gemini South and optical data from the Hubble Space Telescope. Red dots mark the main sequence turnoff and the main sequence knee, around Ks = 18 and 20.5 magnitudes, respectively. Figure 6. (below) This small extract from the full 83-arcsecond field-of-view illustrates the quality and depth of the images from Gemini. The planet, orbiting at roughly the same distance as Saturn in our Solar System, can account for some dynamical features of the disk, such as its warp. However, it cannot fully account for several other features. In particular, β Pic b is not responsible for clearing the region to the observed inner disk edge at 23 astronomical units. Another planet could be the cause, but it would have to be very faint to avoid detection so far. Complete results are published in The Astrophysical Journal; part of a press release also appears on the following Gemini website, which provides a summary of the work, including additional illustrations and an animation of the data showing the planet’s motion (viewable here). The Deepest Ground-based Photometry in a Crowded Field Paolo Turri (University of Victoria, Canada) and colleagues have used the Gemini Multi-conjugate adaptive optics System (GeMS) with the Gemini South Adaptive Optics Imager (GSAOI) to produce the most accurate and deepest near-infrared photometry from the ground of a crowded field. Their Ks measurements of the Galactic globular cluster NGC 1851 reach the precision and depth of optical observations obtained using the Hubble Space Telescope, and the resulting combined color-magnitude diagram reveals physical characteristics of the cluster (Figure 5). 24 GeminiFocus Specifically, the researchers detect the double subgiant branch in the cluster’s center, which indicates either multiple episodes of star formation or multiple populations having distinct metal composition, rather than a single uniform population of stars. Turri et al. measure the main sequence well below its turnoff, for 3.5 magnitudes. A feature observed around KS = 20.5 is the “main sequence knee,” which may be useful to determine the cluster’s age, independent of distance and reddening estimates. The delivered image qu