Using data from the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Euclid space telescope and NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, the team planned to analyze the motions of stars within an ancient collection of stars called a globular cluster. But what they found when they grouped the cluster’s stars by brightness and color as observed by Euclid was a thin “gap” of expected but missing low-mass stars called red dwarfs. This gap is thought to be linked to changes occurring within some stars’ interiors, giving astronomers a glimpse at processes happening inside stars even from thousands of light-years away.
This is the first time the gap feature was discovered in a globular cluster. “The discovery was serendipitous,” said STScI’s Andrea Bellini, one of the research paper’s primary authors. “We were not looking for the gap, but we found it.”
Understanding the Gap
On the HR diagram, stellar luminosities are plotted against their colors, which serve as a proxy for their temperatures. The positions of stars on the diagram reveal specific stellar evolutionary stages. Perhaps the most distinctive feature is the swath of main-sequence stars that cuts diagonally across the diagram.
As the precision and sensitivity of modern astronomy improves, astronomers can place stars more accurately on the plot. The Gaia data revealed a previously unknown feature — a narrow, diagonal slice of mostly missing stars through the main sequence in the middle of the red dwarf region.
So what causes this gap? It appears that in some red dwarf stars, fuel built up in their centers can trigger an energy burst that results in structural instability in a star’s interior. Between 0.34 and 0.36 times the mass of the Sun, red dwarfs undergo small variations that change their size, brightness, and temperature. Because only a small number of stars are undergoing these changes, there is a dearth of red dwarfs with these specific brightnesses. This is reflected in the HR diagram as a gap.
Enabling More Accurate Distance Estimates
“Globular clusters are the ideal laboratories to study stellar evolution and stellar populations,” said STScI’s Massimo Griggio, the principal author on the research paper. “In this globular cluster, the stars are basically at the same distance and have approximately the same age.”
The STScI team used Euclid to study NGC 6397, one of the closest globular clusters to Earth. Located approximately 8,000 light-years away in the southern constellation Ara, it contains hundreds of thousands of stars and is estimated to be 13.4 billion years old.
“Because we can determine the brightness where the gap is with very high precision and know for what stellar masses it occurs, we can use this information to estimate the cluster’s distance,” said STScI’s Russell Ryan, another of the primary researchers.
Gaia found the gap while viewing stars in the local neighborhood, which are typically younger than stars in globular clusters. Now, the Euclid team found the exact same process happening in more distant stellar interiors.
Hubble Tools Pave the Way for New Discoveries
“With these tools, we show that we can push the limits of Euclid, and in the future, the Roman Space Telescope, across a wide field of view,” said team member Mattia Libralato, formerly of STScI and currently with the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) in Padova, Italy. “Further investigations with Euclid and, in the future, Roman, will hopefully allow us to better characterize this feature also in other globular clusters.”
The team’s results published today in Astronomy & Astrophysics.
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Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
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Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
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Related Links and Documents
Euclid: Early Release Observations – Internal kinematics and the convective-transition gap of NGC 6397


























