Newly Identified Star Clusters in M33. III. Structural Parameters
Izaskun San Roman, Ata Sarajedini, Jon A. Holtzman, Donald R., Garnett

TL;DR
This study analyzes the structural properties of 161 star clusters in M33 using Hubble data, revealing their shapes, brightness profiles, and differences from clusters in other galaxies, with implications for understanding their formation and evolution.
Contribution
First comprehensive measurement of ellipticities, position angles, and surface brightness profiles for a large sample of M33 clusters, highlighting environmental effects on their structure.
Findings
M33 clusters are more flattened than Milky Way and M31 clusters.
Ellipticities show no correlation with age or mass.
Young clusters are better fitted by EFF models without radial truncation.
Abstract
We present the morphological properties of 161 star clusters in M33 using the Advanced Camera For Surveys Wide Field Channel onboard the Hubble Space Telescope using observations with the F606W and F814W filters. We obtain, for the first time, ellipticities, position angles, and surface brightness profiles for a significant number of clusters. On average, M33 clusters are more flattened than those of the Milky Way and M31, and more similar to clusters in the Small Magellanic Cloud. The ellipticities do not show any correlation with age or mass, suggesting that rotation is not the main cause of elongation in the M33 clusters. The position angles of the clusters show a bimodality with a strong peak perpendicular to the position angle of the galaxy major axis. These results support the notion that tidal forces are the reason for the cluster flattening. We fit King and EFF models to the…
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