DDO216-A1: a central globular cluster in a low-luminosity transition type galaxy
Andrew A. Cole, Daniel R. Weisz, Evan D. Skillman, Ryan Leaman,, Benjamin F. Williams, Andrew E. Dolphin, L. Clifton Johnson, Alan W., McConnachie, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Julianne Dalcanton, Fabio Governato,, Piero Madau, Sijing Shen, and Mark Vogelsberger

TL;DR
This paper confirms the existence and details of a massive globular cluster at the center of the low-luminosity transition galaxy DDO216, providing insights into its properties, origin, and relation to its host galaxy.
Contribution
It presents detailed characterization of DDO216-A1, the lowest-luminosity galaxy in the Local Group known to host a massive globular cluster, and discusses its possible formation and migration history.
Findings
The cluster has a metallicity of [M/H] = -1.6 and an age of 12.3 Gyr.
It contains ~30 RR Lyrae variables, confirming its distance and Oosterhoff type.
The cluster's properties are consistent with an extended globular cluster in a dwarf galaxy context.
Abstract
We confirm that the object DDO216-A1 is a substantial globular cluster at the center of Local Group galaxy DDO216 (the Pegasus dwarf irregular), using Hubble Space Telescope ACS imaging. By fitting isochrones, we find the cluster metallicity to be [M/H] = -1.6 +/-0.2, for reddening E(B-V) = 0.16 +/-0.02; the best-fit age is 12.3 +/-0.8 Gyr. There are ~30 RR Lyrae variables in the cluster; the magnitude of the fundamental mode pulsators gives a distance modulus of 24.77 +/-0.08 - identical to the host galaxy. The ratio of overtone to fundamental mode variables and their mean periods make DDO216-A1 an Oosterhoff Type I cluster. We find an I-band central surface brightness 20.85 +/-0.17 F814W mag per square arcsecond, a half-light radius of 3.1 arcsec (13.4 pc), and an absolute magnitude M814 = -7.90 +/-0.16 (approximately 10^5 solar masses). King models fit to the cluster give the core…
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