On the origin of the stellar halo and multiple stellar populations in the globular cluster NGC 1851
Kenji Bekki, David Yong

TL;DR
This paper suggests that the stellar halo and multiple populations in NGC 1851 originated from its formation within a dwarf galaxy, with the halo resulting from stripped stars and the cluster from merged globular clusters.
Contribution
It provides a numerical model demonstrating how NGC 1851's stellar halo and multiple populations can form from a dwarf galaxy origin involving tidal stripping and cluster merging.
Findings
Stellar halo has a power-law density slope of ~ -2.
Halo shows no tidal tails within ~200pc.
Nucleated dwarf galaxy evolution explains observed features.
Abstract
We propose that the observed stellar halo around the globular cluster (GC) NGC 1851 is evidence for its formation in the central region of its defunct host dwarf galaxy. We numerically investigate the long-term dynamical evolution of a nucleated dwarf galaxy embedded in a massive dark matter halo under the strong tidal field of the Galaxy. The dwarf galaxy is assumed to have a stellar nucleus (or a nuclear star cluster) that could be the progenitor for NGC 1851. We find that although the dark matter halo and the stellar envelope of the host dwarf of NGC 1851 can be almost completely stripped during its orbital evolution around the Galaxy, a minor fraction of stars in the dwarf can remain trapped by the gravitational field of the nucleus. The stripped nucleus can be observed as NGC 1851 with no/little dark matter whereas stars around the nucleus can be observed as a diffuse stellar halo…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
