Blue Straggler Stars in the Unusual Globular Cluster NGC 6388
We have used multi-band high resolution HST WFPC2 and ACS observations
combined with wide field ground-based observations to study the blue straggler
star (BSS) population in the galactic globular cluster NGC 6388. As in several
other clusters we have studied, the BSS distribution is found to be bimodal:
highly peaked in the cluster center, rapidly decreasing at intermediate radii,
and rising again at larger radii. In other clusters the sparsely populated
intermediate-radius region (or ``zone of avoidance'') corresponds well to that
part of the cluster where dynamical friction would have caused the more massive
BSS or their binary progenitors to settle to the cluster center. Instead, in
NGC 6388, BSS still populate a region that should have been cleaned out by
dynamical friction effects, thus suggesting that dynamical friction is somehow
less efficient than expected. As by-product of these observations, the peculiar
morphology of the horizontal branch (HB) is also confirmed. In particular,
within the (very extended) blue portion of the HB we are able to clearly
characterize three sub-populations: ordinary blue HB stars, extreme HB stars,
and blue hook stars. Each of these populations has a radial distribution which
is indistinguishable from normal cluster stars.
DOI:
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