Tidal disruption of globular clusters in dwarf galaxies with triaxial dark matter haloes
Jorge Penarrubia, Matthew G. Walker, Gerard Gilmore

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how globular clusters are tidally disrupted in dwarf galaxies with triaxial dark matter halos, revealing observable debris features and their kinematic signatures.
Contribution
It demonstrates that only the least dense globular cluster in a dwarf galaxy can be fully disrupted, and characterizes the resulting debris structures and their dependence on orbital parameters.
Findings
F1-like clusters can be fully disrupted by tidal forces.
Debris appears as shells, clumps, and over-densities at low surface brightness.
Debris kinematics vary with orbital type and viewing angle.
Abstract
We use N-body simulations to study the tidal evolution of globular clusters (GCs) in dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies. Our models adopt a cosmologically motivated scenario in which the dSph is approximated by a static NFW halo with a triaxial shape. We apply our models to five GCs spanning three orders of magnitude in stellar density and two in mass, chosen to represent the properties exhibited by the five GCs of the Fornax dSph. We show that only the object representing Fornax's least dense GC (F1) can be fully disrupted by Fornax's internal tidal field--the four denser clusters survive even if their orbits decay to the centre of Fornax. For a large set of orbits and projection angles we examine the spatial and velocity distribution of stellar debris deposited during the complete disruption of an F1-like GC. Our simulations show that such debris appears as shells, isolated clumps and…
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