Detecting the effect of Globular Cluster impacts on the disk of the Milky Way
D. Vande Putte, Mark Cropper

TL;DR
This study uses simulations and galactic potential analysis to investigate how globular cluster crossings impact the Milky Way's disk, exploring star formation triggers and searching for impact remnants.
Contribution
It combines simulation results with a systematic search for globular cluster impact remnants, providing new insights into their role in star formation and disk structure.
Findings
Simulations show globular cluster crossings can cause local gravitational focusing.
Potential impact remnants are identified near NGC 3201, 6397, and 6838.
Some star associations near these clusters may be remnants of past impacts.
Abstract
The crossing of the Galactic disk by a Globular Cluster could produce star formation due to gravitational focussing or compression of disk material. We report on simulations of the effect on disk material which reveal that the crossing can sometimes cause local gravitational focussing of disk material. We also present the salient points of a little-known paper by Levy (2000), that shows that strong compression can result from the shock wave generated by GC disk crossing. The main thrust of our paper is a search for remnants of disk crossings by Globular Clusters. Using the gravitational potential of the Galaxy to locate the position of the most recent crossings of a subset of fifty-four Globular Clusters reveals that systematic errors and uncertainties in initial conditions limit the scope for unequivocal identification. From the subset of fifty-four, six possible search sites with the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
