The kinematics of globular clusters systems in the outer halos of the Aquarius simulations
Jovan Veljanoski, Amina Helmi

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how the outer halo globular cluster systems' rotation signals depend on viewing angle and halo angular momentum, providing insights into galaxy assembly history.
Contribution
It demonstrates that outer halo GC systems can exhibit significant rotation signals influenced by the host halo's angular momentum and viewing perspective, based on simulated galaxy halos.
Findings
GC systems can show measurable rotation signals.
Detection probability varies with viewing angle.
Alignment of halo and GC system angular momentum is common.
Abstract
Stellar halos and globular cluster (GC) systems contain valuable information regarding the assembly history of their host galaxies. Motivated by the detection of a significant rotation signal in the outer halo GC system of M31, we investigate the likelihood of detecting such a rotation signal in projection, using cosmological simulations. To this end we select subsets of tagged particles in the halos of the Aquarius simulations to represent mock GC systems, and analyse their kinematics. We find that GC systems can exhibit a non-negligible rotation signal provided the associated stellar halo also has a net angular momentum. The ability to detect this rotation signal is highly dependent on the viewing perspective, and the probability of seeing a signal larger than that measured in M31 ranges from 10% to 90% for the different halos in the Aquarius suite. High values are found from a…
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