Intergalactic stellar populations in intermediate redshift clusters
J. Melnick, E. Giraud, I. Toledo, F. J. Selman, H. Quintana

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar populations of the intra-cluster light in an intermediate redshift galaxy cluster, revealing predominantly old, metal-rich stars, contrasting with nearby clusters, and challenging existing theoretical models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed population synthesis analysis of ICL stars at intermediate redshift, showing a dominance of old, metal-rich stars and discrepancies with model predictions.
Findings
ICL dominated by old, metal-rich stars
Weak evidence for a small young, metal-poor component
Metal-rich stars mainly originate from the central galaxy
Abstract
A substantial fraction of the total stellar mass in rich clusters of galaxies resides in a diffuse intergalactic component usually referred to as the Intra-Cluster Light (ICL). Theoretical models indicate that these intergalactic stars originate mostly from the tidal interaction of the cluster galaxies during the assembly history of the cluster, and that a significant fraction of these stars could have formed in-situ from the late infall of cold metal-poor gas clouds onto the cluster. The models make predictions about the age distribution of the ICL stars, which may provide additional observational constraints. However, these models also over-predict the fraction of stellar mass in the ICL by a substantial margin. Here we present population synthesis models for the ICL of a dumb-bell dominated intermediate redshift (z=0.29) X-ray cluster for which we have deep MOS data obtained with the…
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