Disentangling the formation mechanisms of nuclear star clusters
Katja Fahrion, Ryan Leaman, Mariya Lyubenova, Glenn van de Ven

TL;DR
This study quantitatively assesses the relative importance of in situ star formation and globular cluster accretion in forming nuclear star clusters across a wide range of galaxy masses, revealing mass-dependent formation channels.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative analysis of the relative contributions of in situ formation and globular cluster mergers in NSC assembly using a semi-analytical model and observational data.
Findings
Massive NSCs mainly formed via in situ star formation (~90%).
Lower-mass NSCs primarily formed through globular cluster mergers (~20%).
NSC mass and its ratio to GC system mass are key indicators of formation channel.
Abstract
Nuclear star clusters (NSCs) are massive star clusters found ubiquitously in the centres of galaxies, from the dwarf regime to massive ellipticals and spirals. The fraction of nucleated galaxies is as high as 90 % at . However, how NSC formation mechanisms work in different regimes and what determines galaxy nucleation is still unclear. The dissipationless accretion of infalling globular clusters (GCs) and the in situ formation of stars directly at the galactic centre likely operate to grow NSCs in most galaxies; however, their efficiency has been difficult to assess observationally. Here, we provide, for the first time, a quantitative determination of the relative strength of these processes in the build-up of individual NSCs. Using a semi-analytical model of NSC formation based on the orbital evolution of inspiraling GCs, together with observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
