Star formation history and metallicity in the Galactic inner bulge revealed by the red giant branch bump

Abstract

The study of the inner region of the Milky Way's bulge is hampered by high interstellar extinction and extreme source crowding. Sensitive high angular resolution near-infrared imaging is needed to study stellar populations in such a complex environment. We use the 0.2'' angular resolution JHKs data from the GALACTICNUCLEUS survey to study the stellar population within two 8.0'× 3.4' fields, about 0.6 and 0.4 to the Galactic north of the Milky Way's centre and to compare it with one in the immediate surroundings of Sagittarius A*. We also characterise the extinction curve of the two fields. The average interstellar extinction to the outer and the inner field is AKs 1.20 0.08 mag and 1.48 0.10 mag, respectively. We present Ks luminosity functions that are complete down to at least 2 mag below the red clump (RC). We detect a feature in the luminosity functions that is fainter than the RC by 0.800.03 and 0.790.02 mag, respectively, in the Ks-band. It runs parallel to the reddening vector. We identify the feature as the red giant branch bump. Fitting α-enhanced BaSTI luminosity functions to our data, we find that a single old stellar population of 12.8 0.6 Gyr and Z = 0.040 0.003 provides the best fit. We obtain that the stellar population in the innermost bulge is old, similar to the one at larger distances from the Galactic plane, and that its metallicity increases down to distances as short as about 60 pc from the centre of the Milky Way. Comparing it with previous known values at larger latitudes (|b|>2), our results favour a flattening of the gradient at |b|<2. As a secondary result we obtain that the extinction index in the studied regions agrees the value of α = 2.300.08, derived in Nogueras-Lara et al. 2018 for the very Galactic centre.

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