GeminiFocus June 2012 | Page 46

ticularly as astronomers came to realize that globulars are among the first stellar systems formed in the universe and that some were probably born earlier than the galaxies they are associated with. “Globular clusters belong to the first stellar populations that show up,” he said. “On average, they are older than the average age of the stellar populations in a galaxy.” Juan Carlos and his colleagues have been looking for a way not only to differentiate globular cluster stars from galactic populations, but also see if a quantitative connection exists between them. “Some results do suggest that such a connection exists and allows the description of the dominant (nonresolved) stellar populations in a galaxy just by properly reading the globular clusters’ characteristics,” he said. “A young lady at the Asociacion used to say that ‘Astronomy enters through the eyes and then flows through the veins‘… I’ve always found that to be a delightful and powerful definition.” In addition to his research, Juan Carlos is wellknown as a fantastic teacher and supporter of his students. Former Ph.D. student Sergio Cellone reminisced about his first days under Juan Carlos’s tutelage. “Among other things, he explained how he and his colleagues managed to subtract a galaxy’