Globular clusters as tracers of the dark matter content of dwarfs in galaxy clusters
Jessica E. Doppel, Laura V. Sales, Julio F. Navarro, Mario G. Abadi,, Eric W. Peng, Elisa Toloba

TL;DR
This study evaluates the accuracy of globular cluster-based dark matter estimates in dwarf galaxies within galaxy clusters using simulations, highlighting biases at low GC counts and suggesting calibration methods.
Contribution
It introduces calibration techniques to improve GC-based mass estimates and explores the formation of ultradiffuse galaxies through tidal stripping in simulations.
Findings
Mass estimates are accurate for systems with ≥10 GCs.
Biases occur when GC count ≤10, depending on velocity dispersion calculation.
Some dwarfs with low velocity dispersion and few GCs may be stripped ultradiffuse galaxies.
Abstract
Globular clusters (GCs) are often used to estimate the dark matter content of galaxies, especially dwarfs, where other kinematic tracers are lacking. These estimates typically assume spherical symmetry and dynamical equilibrium, assumptions that may not hold for the sparse GC population of dwarfs in galaxy clusters. We use a catalog of GCs tagged onto the Illustris simulation to study the accuracy of GC-based mass estimates. We focus on galaxies in the stellar mass range 10 M identified in simulated Virgo-like clusters. Our results indicate that mass estimates are, on average, quite accurate in systems with GC numbers and where the uncertainty of individual GC line-of-sight velocities is smaller than the inferred velocity dispersion, . In cases where , however, biases may result depending on how…
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