504 research outputs found
Faint Fuzzy Star Clusters in NGC1023 as Remnants of Merged Star Cluster Complexes
In the lenticular galaxy NGC1023 a third population of globular clusters
(GCs), called faint fuzzies (FFs), was discovered next to the blue and red GC
populations by Larsen & Brodie. While these FFs have colors comparable to the
red population, the new population is fainter, larger (R_eff > 7 pc) and, most
importantly, shows clear signs of co-rotation with the galactic disk of
NGC1023. We present N-body simulations verifying the hypothesis that these
disk-associated FFs are related to the young massive cluster complexes (CCs)
observed by Bastian et. al in M51, who discovered a mass-radius relation for
these CCs. Our models have an initial configuration based on the observations
from M51 and are placed on various orbits in a galactic potential derived for
NGC1023. All computations end up with a stable object containing 10 to 60% of
the initial CC mass after an integration time of 5 Gyr. A conversion to visual
magnitudes demonstrates that the resulting objects cover exactly the observed
range for FFs. Moreover, the simulated objects show projected half-mass radii
between 3.6 and 13.4 pc, in good agreement with the observed FF sizes. We
conclude that objects like the young massive CCs in M51 are likely progenitors
of the FFs observed in NGC1023.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
High resolution in z-direction: The simulation of disc-bulge-halo galaxies using the particle-mesh code SUPERBOX
SUPERBOX is known as a very efficient particle-mesh code with
highly-resolving sub-grids. Nevertheless, the height of a typical galactic disc
is small compared to the size of the whole system. Consequently, the numerical
resolution in z-direction, i.e. vertically with respect to the plane of the
disc, remains poor. Here, we present a new version of SUPERBOX that allows for
a considerably higher resolution along z. The improved code is applied to
investigate disc heating by the infall of a galaxy satellite. We describe the
improvement and communicate our results. As an important application we discuss
the disruption of a dwarf galaxy within a disc-bulge-halo galaxy that consists
of some 10^6 particles.Comment: Comments: 4 pages, 5 figures, pre-peer reviewed version. In: Galactic
and stellar dynamics in the era of high-resolution surveys, Boily C., Combes
F., Hensler G., eds., Strasbourg (France), March 2008, in press
(Astronomische Nachrichten
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