Nitpicker wrote:Scientifically speaking, if you know something, despite all evidence suggesting something else, it is likely that you don't really know that something.
Statistically speaking, there are enough possibilities in the universe for me to be not puzzled by the lack of red giants in some clusters (and the existence of red giants in others ).
Well and nitpickingly spoken, Nitpicker.
My ramblings were motivated by my own confusion at the similarity yet difference of the two members of the Double Clusters. Why does one of them have red giants but not the other?
On the other hand, one of the papers that Geckzilla provided links to claimed that the halo population of the Double Cluster probably belongs to both clusters, in a way that is slightly similar to
a planet orbiting the center of mass of a binary star. (Or rather, imagine a whole retinue of planets orbiting a binary star!) And five out of six red supergiants in the Double Cluster appear (by visual inspection) to belong to the halo population, where they might be orbiting both of the clusters. So when it comes to why one of the clusters in the Double Cluster has red giants but the other has none, it could be that the question is moot.
I can't resist showing you
this infrared picture of the Double Cluster. The large yellow-green stars are the red supergiants, whereas the small blue-white stars are the non-red stars. The core of NGC 869 is obvious, but the core of NGC 884 is almost lost in the glare of one of the red supergiants.
Ann