Near ir photometry of the old open clusters berkeley 17 and berkeley 18. probing the age of the galactic disc

Dec, 1998
8 pages
Published in:
  • Astron.Astrophys. 343 (1999) 825
e-Print:

Citations per year

199920022005200820113201
Abstract: (arXiv)
We report on near IR (JJ and KK bands) observations of two 8 \times 8 \~(arcmin)^{2} regions centered on the old open clusters Berkeley~17 and Berkeley~18, for which only optical photometry (in BB,VV and II bands) exists. JJ and KK photometry allows us to obtain an independent estimate of cluster metallicity by means of the relationship between the spectroscopic metallicity and the Red Giant Branch (RGB) slope calibrated by Tiede et al (1997). From the analysis of the colour magnitude diagram (CMD) and luminosity function (LF), Berkeley~17 turns out to have a metal content [Fe/H]  0.35[Fe/H]~\sim~-0.35. It is 9 Gyr9~Gyr old, suffers from a reddening E(BV)=0.58magE(B-V) = 0.58 mag and has an heliocentric distance of 2.5kpc2.5 kpc. Berkeley~17 comes out to be substantially younger than in previous work (age 13 Gyr\approx 13~Gyr). On the other hand Berkeley~18 is found to have solar metal abundance, and to be younger than Berkeley~17, with an age of about 4 Gyr4~Gyr. While we confirm Kaluzny (1997) reddening estimate, we significantly revise the distance of the cluster, which lies 4.5kpc4.5 kpc from the Sun. These results on two open clusters believed to be between the oldest put constraints on the age and the evolution of the Galactic Disc. The absence of clusters older than 89 Gyr8-9~Gyr suggests the possibility that the Galaxy underwent a star formation minimum between 13 and 10 Gyr10~Gyr ago.