The ongoing assembly of a central cluster galaxy: Phase-space substructures in the halo of M87
Aaron J. Romanowsky, Jay Strader, Jean P. Brodie, J. Christopher, Mihos, Lee R. Spitler, Duncan A. Forbes, Caroline Foster, Jacob A. Arnold

TL;DR
This study combines observational data and simulations to identify and analyze phase-space substructures in M87's halo, revealing recent accretion events and providing new insights into galaxy formation processes.
Contribution
It presents the first combined observational and theoretical analysis of halo substructures in an early-type galaxy, demonstrating methodologies for future extragalactic phase-space studies.
Findings
Detection of a cold stellar stream in M87's outer halo.
Identification of a large shell-like structure indicating a past accretion event.
Support for ongoing galaxy growth through continuous material accretion.
Abstract
The halos of galaxies preserve unique records of their formation histories. We carry out the first combined observational and theoretical study of phase-space halo substructure in an early-type galaxy: M87, the central galaxy in the Virgo cluster. We analyze an unprecedented wide-field, high-precision photometric and spectroscopic data set for 488 globular clusters (GCs), which includes new, large-radius Subaru/Suprime-Cam and Keck/DEIMOS observations. We find signatures of two substructures in position-velocity phase-space. One is a small, cold stream associated with a known stellar filament in the outer halo; the other is a large shell-like pattern in the inner halo that implies a massive, hitherto unrecognized accretion event. We perform extensive statistical tests and independent metallicity analyses to verify the presence and characterize the properties of these features, and to…
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