The colour-magnitude relation of Globular Clusters in Centaurus and Hydra - Constraints on star cluster self-enrichment with a link to massive Milky Way GCs
J. Fensch, S. Mieske, J. Mueller-Seidlitz, M. Hilker

TL;DR
This study analyzes the colour-magnitude relation of globular clusters in Hydra and Centaurus, linking it to star cluster self-enrichment models, and finds that primordial conditions and mass-radius relations explain observed metallicity trends.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on star cluster self-enrichment by linking observed metallicity relations to primordial cluster properties and improves models with a primordial mass-radius relation.
Findings
Mass-metallicity relation is established at a few 10^5 solar masses.
Self-enrichment models fit observed data with specific primordial parameters.
Metallicity distribution broadening can result from self-enrichment without dwarf galaxy progenitors.
Abstract
We investigate the colour-magnitude relation of metal-poor globular clusters, the 'blue tilt', in the Hydra and Centaurus galaxy clusters and constrain the primordial conditions for star cluster self-enrichment. We analyse U,I photometry for about 2500 globular clusters in the central regions of Hydra and Centaurus, based on FORS1@VLT data. We convert the measured colour-magnitude relations into mass-metallicity space and obtain a scaling of Z \propto M^{0.27 \pm 0.05} for Centaurus GCs and Z \propto M^{0.40 \pm 0.06} for Hydra GCs, consistent with results in other environments. We find that the GC mass-metallicity relation already sets in at present-day masses of a few 10^5 solar masses and is well established in the luminosity range of massive MW clusters like omega Centauri. We compare the mass-metallicity relation with predictions from the star cluster self-enrichment model by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
