196 research outputs found
Bimodal Infrared Colors of the M87 Globular Cluster System: Peaks in the Metallicity Distribution
The globular cluster (GC) systems of many galaxies reveal bimodal optical
color distributions. Based on stellar evolutionary models and the bimodal
colors and metallicities of Galactic GCs this is thought to reflect an
underlying bimodal metallicity distribution. However, stars at many different
phases of stellar evolution contribute to optical light. The I-H color is a
much cleaner tracer of metallicity because it primarily samples the metallicity
sensitive giant branch. Therefore, we use deep HST-NICMOS H, and WFPC2 optical
observations, of M87 GCs to study their metallicity distribution. The M87
clusters are bimodal in I-H, for which there is no known physical explanation
other than a bimodal metallicity distribution. Moreover, the two modes defined
by the B-I and I-H colors are comprised of roughly the same two sets of
objects, confirming that optical colors also primarily trace the metallicity.
This is inconsistent with a recent suggestion based on one model of metallicity
effects on the horizontal branch that bimodality arises from an underlying
unimodal metallicity distribution due to a specific color-metallicity relation.
We also find no discernable variation in the peak colors of the M87 GCs out to
roughly 75 kpc due to the declining ratio of red-to-blue GCs, as implied by
this model. Similarly, there is no evidence that the bimodal peaks are bluer
for systems with large blue-to-red GC ratio. Our observations confirm that the
primary cause of bimodality in cluster systems is an underlying bimodal
metallicity distribution, and not the specific color-metallicity relationship
defined by this horizontal branch model.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. 5 pages, 4 figs. Version 2
is identical to version
The Globular Cluster System of the Spiral Galaxy NGC7814
We present the results of a wide-field photometric study of the globular
cluster (GC) system of the edge-on Sab spiral NGC7814. This is the first spiral
to be fully analyzed from our survey of the GC systems of a large sample of
galaxies beyond the Local Group. NGC7814 is of particular interest because a
previous study estimated that it has 500-1000 GCs, giving it the largest
specific frequency (S_N) known for a spiral. Understanding this galaxy's GC
system is important in terms of our understanding of the GC populations of
spirals in general and has implications for the formation of massive galaxies.
We observed the galaxy in BVR filters with the WIYN 3.5-m telescope, and used
image classification and three-color photometry to select GC candidates. We
also analyzed archival HST WFPC2 images of NGC7814, both to help quantify the
contamination level of the WIYN GC candidate list and to detect GCs in the
inner part of the galaxy halo. Combining HST data with high-quality
ground-based images allows us to trace the entire radial extent of this
galaxy's GC system and determine the total number of GCs directly through
observation. We find that rather than being an especially high-S_N spiral,
NGC7814 has <200 GCs and S_N ~ 1, making it comparable to the two most
well-studied spirals, the Milky Way and M31. We explore the implications of
these results for models of the formation of galaxies and their GC systems. The
initial results from our survey suggest that the GC systems of typical
ellipticals can be accounted for by the merger of two or more spirals, but that
for highly-luminous ellipticals, additional physical processes may be needed.Comment: 28 pages, incl. 4 figures; accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journal, November 2003 issu
Environmental influences on galaxy evolution
We investigate the role of mergers and interactions in the evolution of galaxies by studying galaxies in compact groups. Compact groups of galaxies have high spatial densities and low velocity dispersions making these regions ideal laboratories in which to study the effect of interactions and mergers. Based on a detailed spectroscopic and multi-color imaging study, we find that both the isophotal shapes and the stellar kinematics indicate that many of the elliptical galaxies in compact groups have been affected by tidal interactions. At the same time, however, we find that only a few elliptical galaxies in compact groups have evidence for the young stellar populations that would be expected if they are the result of recent merger of two spiral galaxies. Therefore, we conclude that tidal interactions affect galaxy properties at the current epoch, but the bulk of basic galaxy formation and transformation must have occurred at much higher redshift
Signatures of multiple stellar populations in unresolved extragalactic globular/ young massive star clusters
We present an investigation of potential signatures of the formation of
multiple stellar populations in recently formed extragalactic star clusters.
All of the Galactic globular clusters for which good samples of individual
stellar abundances are available show evidence for multiple populations. This
appears to require that multiple episodes of star formation and light element
enrichment are the norm in the history of a globular cluster. We show that
there are detectable observational signatures of multiple formation events in
the unresolved spectra of massive, young extragalactic star clusters. We
present the results of a pilot program to search for one of the cleanest
signatures that we identify - the combined presence of emission lines from a
very recently formed population and absorption lines from a somewhat older
population. A possible example of such a system is identified in the Antennae
galaxies. This source's spectrum shows evidence of two stellar populations with
ages of 8 Myr and 80 Myr. Further investigation shows that these populations
are in fact physically separated, but only by a projected distance of 59 pc. We
show that the clusters are consistent with being bound and discuss the
possibility that their coalescence could result in a single globular cluster
hosting multiple stellar populations. While not the prototypical system
proposed by most theories of the formation of multiple populations in clusters,
the detection of this system in a small sample is both encouraging and
interesting. Our investigation suggests that expanded surveys of massive young
star clusters should detect more clusters with such signatures.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures: accepted for publication in Ap
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