Bibcode
                                    
                            Cerviño, M.
    Bibliographical reference
                                    New Astronomy Reviews, Volume 57, Issue 5, p. 123-139.
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                        11
            
                        2013
            
  Journal
                                    
                            Citations
                                    31
                            Refereed citations
                                    29
                            Description
                                    Since the early 1970s, stellar population modelling has been one of the
basic tools for understanding the physics of unresolved systems from
observation of their integrated light. Models allow us to relate the
integrated spectra (or colours) of a system with the evolutionary status
of the stars of which it is composed and hence to infer how the system
has evolved from its formation to its present stage. On average,
observational data follow model predictions, but with some scatter, so
that systems with the same physical parameters (age, metallicity, total
mass) produce a variety of integrated spectra. The fewer the stars in a
system, the larger is the scatter. Such scatter is sometimes much larger
than the observational errors, reflecting its physical nature. This
situation has led to the development in recent years (especially since
2010) of Monte Carlo models of stellar populations. Some authors have
proposed that such models are more realistic than state-of-the-art
standard synthesis codes that produce the mean of the distribution of
Monte Carlo models.