Contribution of stripped nuclear clusters to globular cluster and ultra-compact dwarf galaxy populations
Joel Pfeffer, Brendan F. Griffen, Holger Baumgardt, Michael Hilker

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to estimate how many globular clusters and ultra-compact dwarf galaxies originate from tidally stripped dwarf galaxy nuclei, finding that most UCDs are likely high-mass globular clusters.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative prediction of the contribution of stripped dwarf galaxy nuclei to GC and UCD populations using cosmological simulations.
Findings
Stripped nuclei follow a flatter mass function than GCs.
Most high-mass GCs and UCDs originate from tidally disrupted dwarf galaxies.
Predicted numbers of stripped nuclei are consistent with observed UCD populations.
Abstract
We use the Millennium II cosmological simulation combined with the semi-analytic galaxy formation model of Guo et al. (2011) to predict the contribution of galactic nuclei formed by the tidal stripping of nucleated dwarf galaxies to globular cluster (GC) and ultra-compact dwarf galaxy (UCD) populations of galaxies. We follow the merger trees of galaxies in clusters back in time and determine the absolute number and stellar masses of disrupted galaxies. We assume that at all times nuclei have a distribution in nucleus-to-galaxy mass and nucleation fraction of galaxies similar to that observed in the present day universe. Our results show stripped nuclei follow a mass function in the mass range , significantly flatter than found for globular clusters. The contribution of stripped nuclei will therefore be most important among high-mass GCs and…
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