Stellar cluster formation in a Milky Way-sized galaxy at z>4 -- II. A hybrid formation scenario for the nuclear star cluster and its connection to the nuclear stellar ring
Floor van Donkelaar, Lucio Mayer, Pedro R. Capelo, Tomas Tamfal,, Thomas R. Quinn, Piero Madau

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to propose a hybrid formation scenario for the Milky Way's nuclear star cluster, involving both cluster mergers and in-situ star formation driven by gas dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates for the first time through detailed simulations that both accretion of stellar clusters and in-situ star formation contribute to NSC formation in a Milky Way-like galaxy.
Findings
Both stellar cluster accretion and in-situ star formation contribute to NSC growth.
Gas for star formation can come from clusters or large-scale gas inflows.
Presence of a stellar ring similar to the Milky Way's nuclear stellar disc.
Abstract
Nuclear star clusters (NSCs) are massive star clusters found in the innermost region of most galaxies. While recent studies suggest that low-mass NSCs in dwarf galaxies form largely out of the merger of globular clusters and NSCs in massive galaxies accumulate mass primarily through central star formation, the formation channel of the Milky Way's NSC is still uncertain. In this work, we use GigaEris, a high resolution N-body, hydrodynamical, cosmological ``zoom-in'' simulation, to investigate a possible formation path of the NSC in the progenitor of a Milky Way-sized galaxy, as well as its relation to the assembly and evolution of the galactic nuclear region. We study the possibility that bound, young, gas-rich, stellar clusters within a radius of 1.5 kpc of the main galaxy's centre at z>4 are the predecessors of the old, metal-poor stellar population of the Milky Way's NSC. We identify…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
