The SLUGGS survey: combining stars, globular clusters and planetary nebulae to understand the assembly history of early-type galaxies from their large radii kinematics
A. Dolfi, D. A. Forbes, W. J. Couch, K. Bekki, A. Ferr\'e-Mateu, A. J., Romanowsky, J. P. Brodie

TL;DR
This study combines stellar, globular cluster, and planetary nebulae kinematics to explore the assembly histories of early-type galaxies, revealing diverse merger events shaping their outer regions and kinematic profiles.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive method of combining multiple tracers to infer detailed galaxy assembly histories from their outer kinematics.
Findings
Aligned galaxies show signs of late minor mergers with similar kinematics.
Misaligned galaxies likely experienced multiple late minor or major mergers.
Kinematic profiles correlate with different merger histories and environments.
Abstract
We investigate the kinematic properties of nine nearby early-type galaxies with evidence of a disk-like component. Three of these galaxies are located in the field, five in the group and only one in the cluster environment. By combining the kinematics of the stars with those of the globular clusters (GCs) and planetary nebulae (PNe), we probe the outer regions of our galaxies out to 4-6 Re. Six galaxies have PNe and red GCs that show good kinematic alignment with the stars, whose rotation occurs along the photometric major-axis of the galaxies, suggesting that both the PNe and red GCs are good tracers of the underlying stellar population beyond that traced by the stars. Additionally, the blue GCs also show rotation that is overall consistent with that of the red GCs in these six galaxies. The remaining three galaxies show kinematic twists and misalignment of the PNe and GCs with…
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