The mass fraction of halo stars contributed by the disruption of globular clusters in the E-MOSAICS simulations
Marta Reina-Campos (Heidelberg), Meghan E. Hughes (LJMU), J. M., Diederik Kruijssen (Heidelberg), Joel L. Pfeffer (LJMU), Nate Bastian (LJMU),, Robert A. Crain (LJMU), Andreas Koch (Heidelberg), Eva K. Grebel, (Heidelberg)

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to quantify the contribution of globular cluster disruption to the Milky Way's stellar halo, finding it to be a minor component, thus challenging models that emphasize strong cluster mass loss.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative estimates of the fraction of halo stars originating from disrupted globular clusters in cosmological simulations.
Findings
Median of 2.3% of halo stars formed in clusters
Disrupted GCs contribute only 0.2-0.5% of halo mass
GC disruption is a minor contributor to the stellar halo
Abstract
Globular clusters (GCs) have been posited, alongside dwarf galaxies, as significant contributors to the field stellar population of the Galactic halo. In order to quantify their contribution, we examine the fraction of halo stars formed in stellar clusters in the suite of 25 present-day Milky Way-mass cosmological zoom simulations from the E-MOSAICS project. We find that a median of and per cent of the mass in halo field stars formed in clusters and GCs, defined as clusters more massive than and , respectively, with the -th percentiles spanning - and - per cent being caused by differences in the assembly histories of the host galaxies. Under the extreme assumption that no stellar cluster survives to the present day, the mass fractions increase to a median of and per cent. These small fractions indicate…
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