The Bifurcated Age-Metallicity Relation of Milky Way Globular Clusters and its Implications For the Accretion History of the Galaxy
Ryan Leaman, Don A. VandenBerg, and J. Trevor Mendel

TL;DR
This study reveals a bifurcated age-metallicity relation in Milky Way globular clusters, indicating distinct in-situ and accreted origins, with implications for the galaxy's accretion history and progenitor galaxy masses.
Contribution
It identifies two parallel sequences in the globular cluster age-metallicity relation, linking them to in-situ formation and accretion from dwarf galaxies, advancing understanding of galactic assembly.
Findings
Two distinct sequences in the AMR at [Fe/H] $ extgreater -1.8$.
Metal-rich clusters are associated with the MW disk and formed in-situ.
Metal-poor clusters likely originated in dwarf galaxies and were accreted.
Abstract
We use recently derived ages for 61 Milky Way (MW) globular clusters (GCs) to show that their age-metallicity relation (AMR) can be divided into two distinct, parallel sequences at [Fe/H] . Approximately one-third of the clusters form an offset sequence that spans the full range in age (--13 Gyr), but is more metal rich at a given age by dex in [Fe/H]. All but one of the clusters in the offset sequence show orbital properties that are consistent with membership in the MW disk. They are not simply the most metal-rich GCs, which have long been known to have disk-like kinematics, but they are the most metal-rich clusters at all ages. The slope of the mass-metallicity relation (MMR) for galaxies implies that the offset in metallicity of the two branches of the AMR corresponds to a mass decrement of 2 dex, suggesting host galaxy masses of $M_{*} \sim 10^{7-8}…
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