Globular clusters as tracers of the halo assembly of nearby central cluster galaxies
Michael Hilker (1), Tom Richtler (2) ((1) ESO, Garching, (2), Universidad de Concepcion)

TL;DR
This study investigates globular cluster systems in galaxy clusters Fornax and Hydra I, revealing complex stellar populations, evidence of ongoing halo formation, and insights into galaxy assembly through kinematic and compositional analyses.
Contribution
It provides the largest radial velocity sample of a GCS, identifies multiple stellar populations, and links UCDs to galaxy assembly processes using observational and semi-analytical methods.
Findings
Heterogeneous stellar populations in NGC 1399's halo.
Presence of intermediate-age GCs in Hydra I.
Different properties of UCDs and GCs support galaxy assembly models.
Abstract
The properties of globular cluster systems (GCSs) in the core of the nearby galaxy clusters Fornax and Hydra I are presented. In the Fornax cluster we have gathered the largest radial velocity sample of a GCS system so far, which enables us to identify photometric and kinematic sub-populations around the central galaxy NGC 1399. Moreover, ages, metallicities and [alpha/Fe] abundances of a sub-sample of 60 bright globular clusters (GCs) with high S/N spectroscopy show a multi-modal distribution in the correlation space of these three parameters, confirming heterogeneous stellar populations in the halo of NGC 1399. In the Hydra I cluster very blue GCs were identified. They are not uniformly distributed around the central galaxies. 3-color photometry including the U-band reveals that some of them are of intermediate age. Their location coincides with a group of dwarf galaxies under…
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