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We have surveyed the blue straggler star population of the Galactic globular cluster M5 using high-resolution images of the core along with wide-field ground-based images reaching to more than 19 core radii. To gauge M5s relative efficiency of producing stragglers, we compared our sample to five studies of other globular clusters (mainly Ferraro et al. 1997b; Ferraro et al 2003; and Piotto et al. 2004). Using a bright sample selected in the same way as Ferraro et al. 1997b, we found a bimodal radial distribution similar to those found in three other luminous clusters. When the radial distributions for different clusters are scaled using the core radius, there is good cluster-to-cluster agreement in the size of the core straggler sample and the center of the zone of avoidance. However, M5 has the smallest fraction of stragglers in the zone of avoidance of any of the clusters measured to date, and its zone of avoidance appears to be wider (in r / r_c) than that of M3, which has a very similar surface brightness profile. Both of these facts indicate that M5s straggler population has dynamically evolved to a larger extent than M3. Using an ultraviolet sample from Hubble Space Telescope selected in the same way as Ferraro et al. 2003 and Ferraro et al. 2004, we find that the frequency of blue stragglers in M5 is lower than all but two of the clusters examined. We also identified seven bright blue stragglers that were previously misidentified as HB stars by Sandquist et al. (2004). These bright stragglers are most likely the result of stellar collisions involving binary stars.
By combining high-resolution HST and wide-field ground based observations, in ultraviolet and optical bands, we study the Blue Stragglers Star (BSS) population of the galactic globular cluster M5 (NGC 5904) from its very central regions up to its per
By combining high-resolution (HST-WFPC2) and wide-field ground based (2.2m ESO-WFI) and space (GALEX) observations, we have collected a multi-wavelength photometric data base (ranging from the far UV to the near infrared) of the galactic globular clu
We have used high resolution WFPC2-HST and wide field ground-based observations to construct a catalog of blue straggler stars (BSS) which spans the entire radial extent of the globular cluster NGC 6752. The BSS sample is the most extensive ever obta
We have used a combination of ACS-HST high-resolution and wide-field SUBARU data in order to study the Blue Straggler Star (BSS) population over the entire extension of the remote Galactic globular cluster NGC 2419. The BSS population presented here
Blue Straggler Stars (BSSs) are observed in Galactic globular clusters and old open clusters. The radial distribution of BSSs has been used to diagnose the dynamical evolution of globular clusters. For the first time, with a reliable sample of BSSs i