Euclid preparation. LVIII. Detecting globular clusters in the Euclid survey
Euclid Collaboration: K. Voggel (1), A. Lan\c{c}on (1), T. Saifollahi, (2, 1), S. S. Larsen (3), M. Cantiello (4), M. Rejkuba (5), J.-C., Cuillandre (6), P. Hudelot (7), A. A. Nucita (8, 9, 10), M. Urbano (1),, E. Romelli (11), M. A. Raj (2), M. Schirmer (12), C. Tortora (13)

TL;DR
This paper evaluates Euclid telescope's capability to detect extragalactic globular clusters, demonstrating that Euclid will significantly enhance the study of these clusters across various galaxies using high-resolution imaging.
Contribution
It introduces a method to detect and classify extragalactic globular clusters in Euclid data, including simulations and early observations, highlighting Euclid's potential for advancing GC research.
Findings
Euclid can detect about 350,000 EGCs within 100 Mpc.
Machine learning methods achieve high purity and completeness in GC classification.
Euclid will substantially increase the number of accessible GCs compared to previous surveys.
Abstract
Extragalactic globular clusters (EGCs) are an abundant and powerful tracer of galaxy dynamics and formation, and their own formation and evolution is also a matter of extensive debate. The compact nature of globular clusters means that they are hard to spatially resolve and thus study outside the Local Group. In this work we have examined how well EGCs will be detectable in images from the Euclid telescope, using both simulated pre-launch images and the first early-release observations of the Fornax galaxy cluster. The Euclid Wide Survey will provide high-spatial resolution VIS imaging in the broad IE band as well as near-infrared photometry (YE, JE, and HE). We estimate that the galaxies within 100 Mpc in the footprint of the Euclid survey host around 830 000 EGCs of which about 350 000 are within the survey's detection limits. For about half of these EGCs, three infrared colours will…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
