Recent Formation of a Spiral Disk Hosting Progenitor Globular Clusters at the center of the Perseus Brightest Cluster Galaxy: I. Spiral Disk
Michael C. H. Yeung, Youichi Ohyama, Jeremy Lim

TL;DR
This study investigates the spiral disk at the center of NGC 1275, revealing two stellar populations and suggesting the disk formed from accreted gas or a cannibalized galaxy, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed stellar population analysis of the spiral disk in NGC 1275, proposing its formation history involving gas accretion or galaxy cannibalism.
Findings
Identified a young stellar population (~0.15 Gyr) with distinct kinematics.
Detected an older stellar population (~10 Gyr) with broader velocity dispersion.
Suggested the spiral disk formed from accreted gas or a disrupted galaxy.
Abstract
We address the nature and origin of a spiral disk at the center of NGC 1275, the giant elliptical galaxy at the center of the Perseus cluster, that spans a radius of . By comparing stellar absorption lines measured in long-slit optical spectra with synthetic spectra for single stellar populations, we find that fitting of these lines requires two stellar populations: (i) a very young population that peaks in radial velocity at of the systemic velocity within a radius of of the nucleus, a velocity dispersion significantly lower than , and an age of ; and (ii) a very old population having a constant radial velocity with a radius corresponding to the systemic velocity, a much broader velocity dispersion of , and an age of…
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