Star Clusters in Pseudo-Bulges of Spiral Galaxies
Daiana Di Nino, Michele Trenti, Massimo Stiavelli, C. Marcella, Carollo, Claudia Scarlata, Rosemary F. G. Wyse

TL;DR
This study analyzes star cluster systems in pseudo-bulges of spiral galaxies, revealing diverse ages and masses, and suggesting evolutionary links to dwarf galaxies and globular clusters.
Contribution
It provides detailed photometric analysis of star clusters in pseudo-bulges, including age, mass, and frequency estimates, and compares these to dwarf galaxies and early-type spirals.
Findings
Star clusters range from young, low-mass to old, massive types.
Specific frequencies of clusters are similar to early-type spirals.
Higher cluster frequencies than dwarf galaxies support evolutionary links.
Abstract
We present a study of the properties of the star-cluster systems around pseudo-bulges of late-type spiral galaxies using a sample of 11 galaxies with distances from 17 to 37 Mpc. Star clusters are identified from multiband HST ACS and WFPC2 imaging data by combining detections in 3 bands (F435W and F814W with ACS and F606W with WFPC2). The photometric data are then compared to population synthesis models to infer the masses and ages of the star clusters. Photometric errors and completeness are estimated by means of artificial source Monte Carlo simulations. Dust extinction is estimated by considering F160W NICMOS observations of the central regions of the galaxies, augmenting our wavelength coverage. In all galaxies we identify star clusters with a wide range of ages, from young (age < 8 Myr) blue clusters, with typical mass of 10^3 Msun to older (age > 100-250 Myr), more massive, red…
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