The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS) XXXI. The kinematics of intra-cluster globular clusters in the core of the Virgo cluster
Alessia Longobardi, Eric W. Peng, Patrick C\^ot\'e, J. Christopher, Mihos, Laura Ferrarese, Thomas H. Puzia, Ariane Lan\c{c}on, Hong-Xin Zhang,, Roberto P. Mu\~noz, John P. Blakeslee, Puragra Guhathakurta, Patrick R., Durrell, R\'uben S\'anchez-Janssen, Elisa Toloba

TL;DR
This paper presents the first definitive kinematic detection of intra-cluster globular clusters in the Virgo cluster, revealing their distribution, properties, and implications for cluster assembly and galaxy interactions.
Contribution
It provides new kinematic measurements of intra-cluster globular clusters in Virgo, distinguishing them from galaxy-bound clusters and analyzing their properties and origins.
Findings
IC globular clusters have distinct kinematics from galaxy-bound clusters.
The intra-cluster globular cluster population is more extended and has a higher fraction of blue clusters.
The intra-cluster globular clusters likely originate from tidally disrupted low-mass galaxies.
Abstract
Intra-cluster (IC) populations are expected to be a natural result of the hierarchical assembly of clusters, yet their low space densities make them difficult to detect and study. We present the first definitive kinematic detection of an IC population of globular clusters (GCs) in the Virgo cluster, around the central galaxy, M87. This study focuses on the Virgo core for which the combination of NGVS photometry and follow-up spectroscopy allows us to reject foreground star contamination and explore GC kinematics over the full Virgo dynamical range. The GC kinematics changes gradually with galactocentric distance, decreasing in mean velocity and increasing in velocity dispersion, eventually becoming indistinguishable from the kinematics of Virgo dwarf galaxies at . By kinematically tagging M87 halo and intra-cluster GCs we find that 1) the M87 halo has a smaller…
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