# Globular Clusters in the Outer Halo of M31

**Authors:** Song Wang, Jun Ma, Jifeng Liu

arXiv: 1901.11229 · 2019-03-06

## TL;DR

This study analyzes photometric data of 53 globular clusters in M31's outer halo to understand their properties and the galaxy's merger history, revealing bimodal luminosity and metallicity distributions and differences from the Milky Way.

## Contribution

First comprehensive multiband photometric analysis of M31's outer halo GCs linking their properties to galaxy formation and merger history.

## Key findings

- Halo GCs with ages <8 Gyr are mostly around 100 kpc radius.
- Halo GCs show metallicities consistent with associated substructures.
- M31 has significantly more halo GCs than the Milky Way.

## Abstract

In this paper, we present photometry of 53 globular clusters (GCs) in the M31 outer halo, including the {\sl GALEX} FUV and NUV, SDSS $ugriz$, 15 intermediate-band filters of BATC, and 2MASS $JHK_{\rm s}$ bands. By comparing the multicolour photometry with stellar population synthesis models, we determine the metallicities, ages, and masses for these GCs, aiming to probe the merging/accretion history of M31. We find no clear trend of metallicity and mass with the de-projected radius. The halo GCs with age younger than $\approx$ 8 Gyr are mostly located at the de-projected radii around 100 kpc, but this may be due to a selection effect. We also find that the halo GCs have consistent metallicities with their spatially-associated substructures, which provides further evidence of the physical association between them. Both the disk and halo GCs in M31 show a bimodal luminosity distribution. However, we should emphasize that there are more faint halo GCs which are not being seen in the disk. The bimodal luminosity function of the halo GCs may reflect different origin or evolution environment in their original hosts. The M31 halo GCs includes one intermediate metallicity group ($-1.5 <$ [Fe/H] $< -0.4$) and one metal-poor group ([Fe/H] $<-1.5$), while the disk GCs have one metal-rich group more. There are considerable differences between the halo GCs in M31 and the Milky Way (MW). The total number of M31 GCs is approximately three times more numerous than that of the MW, however, M31 has about six times the number of halo GCs in the MW. Compared to M31 halo GCs, the Galactic halo ones are mostly metal-poor. Both the numerous halo GCs and the higher-metallicity component are suggestive of an active merger history of M31.

## Full text

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## Figures

50 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.11229/full.md

## References

94 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.11229/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.11229