Do ultra compact dwarf galaxies form monolithically or as merged star cluster complexes?
Hamidreza Mahani, Akram Hasani Zonoozi, Hosein Haghi, Tereza, Jerabkova, Pavel Kroupa, Steffen Mieske

TL;DR
This study investigates whether ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) form through monolithic collapse or as merged star cluster complexes, analyzing their mass-to-light ratios, dark remnants, and formation scenarios with variable initial mass functions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that variable IMFs aligned with metallicity and density explain UCD observations better than universal IMFs, supporting different formation pathways.
Findings
Variable IMFs match observed UCD properties.
Monolithic formation explains high $M/L$ ratios.
Merged clusters account for low $M/L$ UCDs.
Abstract
Some ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) have elevated observed dynamical V-band mass-to-light () ratios with respect to what is expected from their stellar populations assuming a canonical initial mass function (IMF). Observations have also revealed the presence of a compact dark object in the centers of several UCDs, having a mass of a few to 15\% of the present-day stellar mass of the UCD. This central mass concentration has typically been interpreted as a super-massive black hole, but can in principle also be a sub-cluster of stellar remnants. We explore the following two formation scenarios of UCDs, i) monolithic collapse and ii) mergers of star clusters in cluster complexes as are observed in massively star-bursting regions. We explore the physical properties of the UCDs at different evolutionary stages assuming different initial stellar masses of the UCDs and the IMF…
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