The formation and assembly history of the Milky Way revealed by its globular cluster population
J. M. Diederik Kruijssen (1), Joel L. Pfeffer (2), Marta Reina-Campos, (1), Robert A. Crain (2), Nate Bastian (2) ((1) Heidelberg, (2) LJMU)

TL;DR
This study uses the age-metallicity data of 96 Milky Way globular clusters to reconstruct the galaxy's formation and merger history, revealing a rapid early assembly, no major mergers since z~4, and identifying key satellite progenitors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of inferring the Milky Way's merger tree from globular cluster data, validated against cosmological simulations, providing new insights into its assembly history.
Findings
Milky Way assembled quickly, reaching 25-50% of halo mass by z=3-1.5.
No major mergers (mass ratios >1:4) since z~4.
Identified three massive satellite progenitors, including the hypothetical Kraken.
Abstract
We use the age-metallicity distribution of 96 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) to infer the formation and assembly history of the Milky Way (MW), culminating in the reconstruction of its merger tree. Based on a quantitative comparison of the Galactic GC population to the 25 cosmological zoom-in simulations of MW-mass galaxies in the E-MOSAICS project, which self-consistently model the formation and evolution of GC populations in a cosmological context, we find that the MW assembled quickly for its mass, reaching of its present-day halo mass already at and half of its present-day stellar mass at . We reconstruct the MW's merger tree from its GC age-metallicity distribution, inferring the number of mergers as a function of mass ratio and redshift. These statistics place the MW's assembly among the 72th-94th percentile of the E-MOSAICS…
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