Stellar populations and star formation histories of the nuclear star clusters in six nearby galaxies
Nikolay Kacharov, Nadine Neumayer, Anil C. Seth, Michele Cappellari,, Richard McDermid, C. Jakob Walcher, Torsten B\"oker

TL;DR
This study investigates the stellar populations and star formation histories of nuclear star clusters in six nearby galaxies, revealing prolonged star formation in late-types and younger ages in early-types, with evidence of recent star formation and complex histories.
Contribution
It provides detailed star formation histories of NSCs in six galaxies using high-resolution spectroscopy and empirical SSP models, highlighting differences between galaxy types.
Findings
Late-type galaxy NSCs experienced prolonged star formation.
Early-type galaxy NSCs are consistent with single stellar populations.
Recent star formation (<100 Myr) observed in some nuclei.
Abstract
The majority of spiral and elliptical galaxies in the Universe host very dense and compact stellar systems at their centres known as nuclear star clusters (NSCs). In this work we study the stellar populations and star formation histories (SFH) of the NSCs of six nearby galaxies with stellar masses ranging between and (four late-type spirals and two early-types) with high resolution spectroscopy. Our observations are taken with the X-Shooter spectrograph at the VLT. We make use of an empirical simple stellar population (SSP) model grid to fit composite stellar populations to the data and recover the SFHs of the nuclei. We find that the nuclei of all late-type galaxies experienced a prolonged SFH, while the NSCs of the two early-types are consistent with SSPs. The NSCs in the late-type galaxies sample appear to have formed a significant fraction of their…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
