Diversity of nuclear star cluster formation mechanisms revealed by their star formation histories
K. Fahrion, M. Lyubenova, G. van de Ven, M. Hilker, R. Leaman, J., Falc\'on-Barroso, A. Bittner, L. Coccato, E. M. Corsini, D. A. Gadotti, E., Iodice, R. M. McDermid, I. Mart\'in-Navarro, F. Pinna, A. Poci, M. Sarzi, P., T. de Zeeuw, and L. Zhu

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation mechanisms of nuclear star clusters across different galaxy types by analyzing their star formation histories, revealing a transition from globular cluster accretion to in-situ star formation with increasing galaxy and NSC mass.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for a mass-dependent transition in NSC formation channels, combining spectroscopic data analysis with galaxy property correlations.
Findings
Low-mass NSCs are metal-poor, similar to globular clusters.
Massive NSCs show diverse star formation histories and ongoing in-situ formation.
A transition in dominant formation mechanism occurs at galaxy mass ~10^9 M_sun.
Abstract
Nuclear star clusters (NSCs) are the densest stellar systems in the Universe and are found in the centres of all types of galaxies. They are thought to form via mergers of star clusters such as ancient globular clusters (GCs) that spiral to the centre as a result of dynamical friction or through in-situ star formation directly at the galaxy centre. There is evidence that both paths occur, but the relative contribution of either channel and their correlation with galaxy properties are not yet constrained observationally. We aim to derive the dominant NSC formation channel for a sample of 25 nucleated galaxies, mostly in the Fornax galaxy cluster, with stellar masses between M_\rm{gal} \sim 10^8 and and NSC masses between M_\rm{NSC} \sim 10^5 and . Using Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) data from the Fornax 3D survey and the ESO archive,…
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