3,034 research outputs found
The Globular Cluster System in the Inner Region of the Giant Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4472
We present a study of globular clusters in the inner region of the giant
elliptical galaxy NGC 4472, based on the HST WFPC2 archive data. We have found
about 1560 globular cluster candidates at the galactocentric radius r < 4
arcmin. V-(V-I) diagram of these objects shows a dominant vertical structure
which consists obviously of two components: blue globular clusters (BGCs) and
red globular clusters (RGCs). The luminosity function of the globular clusters
is derived to have a peak at V(max)=23.50+/-0.16 from Gaussian fitting. The
distance to NGC 4472 is estimated to be d=14.7+/-1.3 Mpc.The peak luminosity
for the RGCs is similar to that for the BGCs, which indicates that the RGCs may
be several Gyrs younger than the BGCs. The mean luminosity of the bright BGCs
decreases by 0.2 mag with increasing galactocentric radius over the range of 9
arcmin, while that of the RGCs does not. The observed color distribution of
these globular clusters is distinctively bimodal with peaks at (V-I) = 0.98 and
1.23. The mean observed color of all the globular clusters with V < 23.9 mag is
derived to be (V-I)=1.11. These colors are exactly the same as those for the
globular clusters in M87. It is found that the relative number of the BGCs to
the RGCs is increasing with the increasing galactocentric radius. Surface
number density profiles of both the BGCs and RGCs get flat in the central
region, and the core radii of the globular cluster systems are measured to be
r_c = 1.9 arcmin for the BGCs, r_c = 1.2 arcmin for the RGCs, and r_c = 1.3
arcmin for the total sample, which are much larger than the stellar core of the
galaxy. In general the properties of the globular clusters in the inner region
of NGC 4472 are consistent with those of the globular clusters in the outer
region of NGC 4472.Comment: 27 pages (AASLaTex), 22 Postscript Figures, Accepted for Publication
in the Astronomical Journal, Jul. 31st, 200
On the Self-Consistent Response of Stellar Systems to Gravitational Shocks
We study the reaction of a globular star cluster to a time-varying tidal
perturbation (gravitational shock) using self-consistent N-body simulations and
address two questions. First, to what extent is the cluster interior protected
by adiabatic invariants. Second, how much further energy change does the
postshock evolution of the cluster potential produce and how much does it
affect the dispersion of stellar energies. We introduce the adiabatic
correction} as ratio of the energy change, , to its value in the impulse
approximation. When the potential is kept fixed, the numerical results for the
adiabatic correction for stars with orbital frequency \omega can be
approximated as (1 + \omega^2 \tau^2)^{-\gamma}. For shocks with the
characteristic duration of the order the half-mass dynamical time of the
cluster, \tau < t_{dyn,h}, the exponent \gamma = 5/2. For more prolonged
shocks, \tau > 4 t_{dyn,h}, the adiabatic correction is shallower, \gamma =
3/2. When we allow for self-gravity and potential oscillations which follow the
shock, the energy of stars in the core changes significantly, while the total
energy of the system is conserved. Paradoxically, the postshock potential
fluctuations reduce the total amount of energy dispersion, . The effect
is small but real and is due to the postshock energy change being statistically
anti-correlated with the shock induced heating. These results are to be applied
to Fokker-Planck models of the evolution of globular clusters.Comment: 20 pages; ApJ 513 (in press
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
Dynamical Evolution of Globular Clusters in Hierarchical Cosmology
We probe the evolution of globular clusters that could form in giant
molecular clouds within high-redshift galaxies. Numerical simulations
demonstrate that the large and dense enough gas clouds assemble naturally in
current hierarchical models of galaxy formation. These clouds are enriched with
heavy elements from earlier stars and could produce star clusters in a similar
way to nearby molecular clouds. The masses and sizes of the model clusters are
in excellent agreement with the observations of young massive clusters. Do
these model clusters evolve into globular clusters that we see in our and
external galaxies? In order to study their dynamical evolution, we calculate
the orbits of model clusters using the outputs of the cosmological simulation
of a Milky Way-sized galaxy. We find that at present the orbits are isotropic
in the inner 50 kpc of the Galaxy and preferentially radial at larger
distances. All clusters located outside 10 kpc from the center formed in the
now-disrupted satellite galaxies. The spatial distribution of model clusters is
spheroidal, with a power-law density profile consistent with observations. The
combination of two-body scattering, tidal shocks, and stellar evolution results
in the evolution of the cluster mass function from an initial power law to the
observed log-normal distribution.Comment: 5 pages, proceedings of IAU 246 "Dynamical Evolution of Dense Stellar
Systems", eds. Vesperini, Giersz, Sill
Formation and evolution of clumpy tidal tails around globular clusters
We present some results of numerical simulations of a globular cluster
orbiting in the central region of a triaxial galaxy on a set of 'loop' orbits.
Tails start forming after about a quarter of the globular cluster orbital
period and develop, in most cases, along the cluster orbit, showing clumpy
substructures as observed, for example, in Palomar 5. If completely detectable,
clumps can contain about 7,000 solar masses each, i.e. about 10% of the cluster
mass at that epoch. The morphology of tails and clumps and the kinematical
properties of stars in the tails are studied and compared with available
observational data. Our finding is that the stellar velocity dispersion tends
to level off at large radii, in agreement to that found for M15 and Omega
Centauri.Comment: LaTeX 2e, uses AASTeX v5.x, 40 pages with 18 figures. Submitted to
The Astronomical Journa
The growth of galaxies in cosmological simulations of structure formation
We use hydrodynamic simulations to examine how the baryonic components of
galaxies are assembled, focusing on the relative importance of mergers and
smooth accretion in the formation of ~L_* systems. In our primary simulation,
which models a (50\hmpc)^3 comoving volume of a Lambda-dominated cold dark
matter universe, the space density of objects at our (64-particle) baryon mass
resolution threshold, M_c=5.4e10 M_sun, corresponds to that of observed
galaxies with L~L_*/4. Galaxies above this threshold gain most of their mass by
accretion rather than by mergers. At the redshift of peak mass growth, z~2,
accretion dominates over merging by about 4:1. The mean accretion rate per
galaxy declines from ~40 M_sun/yr at z=2 to ~10 M_sun/yr at z=0, while the
merging rate peaks later (z~1) and declines more slowly, so by z=0 the ratio is
about 2:1. We cannot distinguish truly smooth accretion from merging with
objects below our mass resolution threshold, but extrapolating our measured
mass spectrum of merging objects, dP/dM ~ M^a with a ~ -1, implies that
sub-resolution mergers would add relatively little mass. The global star
formation history in these simulations tracks the mass accretion rate rather
than the merger rate. At low redshift, destruction of galaxies by mergers is
approximately balanced by the growth of new systems, so the comoving space
density of resolved galaxies stays nearly constant despite significant mass
evolution at the galaxy-by-galaxy level. The predicted merger rate at z<~1
agrees with recent estimates from close pairs in the CFRS and CNOC2 redshift
surveys.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 35 pp including 15 fig
Determining the galactic mass distribution using tidal streams from globular clusters
We discuss how to use tidal streams from globular clusters to measure the
mass distribution of the Milky Way. Recent proper motion determinations for
globular clusters from plate measurements and Hipparcos astrometry provide
several good candidates for Galactic mass determinations in the intermediate
halo, far above the Galactic disk, including Pal 5, NGC 4147, NGC 5024 (M53)
and NGC 5466; the remaining Hipparcos clusters provide candidates for
measurements several kpc above and below the disk. These clusters will help
determine the profile and shape of the inner halo. To aid this effort, we
present two methods of mass determination: one, a generalization of
rotation-curve mass measurements, which gives the mass and potential from
complete position-velocity observations for stream stars; and another using a
simple chi^2 estimator, which can be used when only projected positions and
radial velocities are known for stream stars. We illustrate the use of the
latter method using simulated tidal streams from Pal 5 and find that fairly
accurate mass determinations are possible even for relatively poor data sets.
Follow-up observations of clusters with proper motion determinations may reveal
tidal streams; obtaining radial velocity measurements would enable accurate
measurements of the mass distribution in the inner Galaxy.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, published in A
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