Hidden in the Haystack: Low-luminosity globular clusters towards the Milky Way bulge
F. Gran, M. Zoccali, I. Saviane, E. Valenti, A. Rojas-Arriagada, R., Contreras Ramos, J. Hartke, J. A. Carballo-Bello, C. Navarrete, M. Rejkuba,, J. Olivares Carvajal

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and confirmation of five new low-luminosity globular clusters near the Milky Way bulge using Gaia and VVV data, revealing their properties and potential origins.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multi-dimensional search method combining Gaia proper motions and near-IR photometry to identify faint globular clusters in the inner Galaxy.
Findings
Five new low-luminosity globular clusters discovered.
Clusters show well-defined red-giant and horizontal branches.
Preliminary orbital analysis links some clusters to known Galactic structures.
Abstract
Recent wide-area surveys have enabled us to study the Milky Way with unprecedented detail. Its inner regions, hidden behind dust and gas, have been partially unveiled with the arrival of near-IR photometric and spectroscopic datasets. Among recent discoveries, there is a population of low-mass globular clusters, known to be missing, especially towards the Galactic bulge. In this work, five new low-luminosity globular clusters located towards the bulge area are presented. They were discovered by searching for groups in the multi-dimensional space of coordinates, colours, and proper motions from the Gaia EDR3 catalogue and later confirmed with deeper VVV survey near-IR photometry. The clusters show well-defined red-giant branches and, in some cases, horizontal branches with their members forming a dynamically coherent structure in proper motion space. Four of them were confirmed by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
