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A few years ago we started an observational campaign aimed at the thorough study of the massive and remote globular cluster NGC2419. We have used the collected data, e.g., to test alternative theories of gravitation, to constrain the stellar M/L ratio by direct analysis of the observed luminosity function, and to search for Dark Matter within the cluster. Here we present some recent results about (a) the peculiar abundance pattern that we observed in a sample of cluster giants, and (b) newly found photometric evidence for the presence of multiple populations in the cluster. In particular, from new deep and accurate uVI LBT photometry, we find that the color spread on the Red Giant Branch is significantly larger than the observational errors both in V-I and u-V, and that the stars lying to the blue of the RGB ridge line are more concentrated toward the center of the cluster than those lying to the red of the ridge line.
(Abridged) We analyze chemical and kinematical properties of about 850 FGK solar neighborhood long-lived dwarfs observed with the HARPS high-resolution spectrograph. The stars in the sample have logg > 4 dex, 5000 < Teff < 6500 K, and -1.39 < [Fe/H]
Chemical abundances are presented for 19 elements in a sample of 63 red giants in the Carina dwarf spheroidal galaxy (dSph), based on homogeneous 1D/LTE model atmosphere analyses of our own observations (32 stars) and data available in the literature
In this letter we describe how we use stellar dynamics information to constrain the shape of the stellar IMF in a sample of 27 early-type galaxies from the CALIFA survey. We obtain dynamical and stellar mass-to-light ratios, $Upsilon_mathrm{dyn}$ and
The chemical composition of stars that have orbiting planets provides important clues about the frequency, architecture, and composition of exoplanet systems. We explore the possibility that stars from different galactic populations that have differe
We study the chemical properties of the stellar populations in eight simulations of the formation of Milky-Way mass galaxies in a LCDM Universe. Our simulations include metal-dependent cooling and an explicitly multiphase treatment of the effects on