Formation of Metal-Poor Globular Clusters in Lyman alpha Emitting Galaxies in the Early Universe
Bruce G. Elmegreen (1), Sangeeta Malhotra (2), James Rhoads (2) ((1), IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, (2) Arizona State University)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that metal-poor globular clusters formed in early low-mass, Lyman-alpha emitting galaxies, and shows that their properties and space densities align with observations of such galaxies in the early universe.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking the formation of metal-poor globular clusters to early LAE galaxies, explaining their properties and current distribution.
Findings
Estimated initial conditions for GC formation in early galaxies.
Calculated star formation rates and luminosities consistent with observations.
Found agreement between LAE galaxy densities and present-day metal-poor GCs.
Abstract
The size, mass, luminosity, and space density of Lyman-alpha emitting (LAE) galaxies observed at intermediate to high redshift agree with expectations for the properties of galaxies that formed metal-poor halo globular clusters (GCs). The low metallicity of these clusters is the result of their formation in low-mass galaxies. Metal-poor GCs could enter spiral galaxies along with their dwarf galaxy hosts, unlike metal-rich GCs which form in the spirals themselves. Considering an initial GC mass larger than the current mass to account for multiple stellar populations, and considering the additional clusters that are likely to form with massive clusters, we estimate that each GC with a mass today greater than 2x10^5 Msun was likely to have formed among a total stellar mass ~3x10^7 Msun, a molecular mass ~10^9 Msun, and 10^7 to 10^9 Msun of older stars, depending on the relative gas…
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