Globular cluster systems in nearby dwarf galaxies - II. Nuclear star clusters and their relation to massive Galactic globular clusters
Iskren Y. Georgiev (1), Michael Hilker (2), Thomas H. Puzia (3), Paul, Goudfrooij (4), Holger Baumgardt (1) ((1) AIfA, Bonn, Germany; (2) ESO,, Garching b. Munchen, Germany; (3) HIA, Victoria, Canada; (4) STScI,, Baltimore, USA)

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties of nuclear star clusters in dwarf galaxies and their relation to massive globular clusters in the Milky Way, suggesting a common origin and complex stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the escape velocities and structural parameters of nuclear clusters, linking them to extended horizontal branch globular clusters and their formation history.
Findings
nGCs and EHB-GCs have similar escape velocity and color distributions
Escape velocity correlates with metallicity, indicating self-enrichment processes
Galactic EHB-GCs likely originated in dwarf galaxy centers before accretion
Abstract
(Abridged) Using luminosities and structural parameters of globular clusters (GCs) in the nuclear regions (nGCs) of low-mass dwarf galaxies from HST/ACS imaging we derive the present-day escape velocities (v_esc) of stellar ejecta to reach the cluster tidal radius and compare them with those of Galactic GCs with extended (hot) horizontal branches (EHBs-GCs). For EHB-GCs, we find a correlation between the present-day v_esc and their metallicity as well as (V-I)_0 colour. The similar v_esc, (V-I)_0 distribution of nGCs and EHB-GCs implies that nGCs could also have complex stellar populations. The v_esc-[Fe/H] relation could reflect the known relation of increasing stellar wind velocity with metallicity, which in turn could explain why more metal-poor clusters typically show more peculiarities in their stellar population than more metal-rich clusters of the same mass do. Thus the cluster…
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