The physics governing the upper truncation mass of the globular cluster mass function
Meghan E. Hughes, Joel L. Pfeffer, Nate Bastian, Marie Martig, J. M., Diederik Kruijssen, Robert A. Crain, Marta Reina-Campos, Sebastian, Trujillo-Gomez

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical processes that determine the maximum mass of globular clusters in galaxies, using simulations to understand how formation and disruption mechanisms shape the observed mass function truncation.
Contribution
The paper combines simulations and theoretical analysis to identify the physical origins of the upper mass truncation in globular cluster mass functions across galaxy masses.
Findings
Disruption processes lower the truncation mass in smaller galaxies.
High-mass GCs survive better in larger galaxies due to environmental factors.
The truncation mass is shaped by both formation conditions and disruption mechanisms.
Abstract
The mass function of globular cluster (GC) populations is a fundamental observable that encodes the physical conditions under which these massive stellar clusters formed and evolved. The high-mass end of star cluster mass functions are commonly described using a Schechter function, with an exponential truncation mass . For the GC mass functions in the Virgo galaxy cluster, this truncation mass increases with galaxy mass (). In this paper we fit Schechter mass functions to the GCs in the most massive galaxy group () in the E-MOSAICS simulations. The fiducial cluster formation model in E-MOSAICS reproduces the observed trend of with for the Virgo cluster. We therefore examine the origin of the relation by fitting as a function of galaxy mass, with and without accounting for mass loss by two-body…
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