EDGE: A new model for Nuclear Star Cluster formation in dwarf galaxies
Emily I. Gray, Justin I. Read, Ethan Taylor, Matthew D. A. Orkney,, Martin P. Rey, Robert M. Yates, Stacy Y. Kim, Noelia E. D. No\"el, Oscar, Agertz, Eric Andersson, Andrew Pontzen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new formation mechanism for Nuclear Star Clusters in dwarf galaxies, based on cosmological simulations showing NSCs forming after major mergers in quenched, gas-retaining dwarfs, with implications for their stellar populations.
Contribution
The study presents a novel NSC formation model via mergers in dwarf galaxies, explaining multiple stellar populations and linking to observed globular clusters like Omega Centauri.
Findings
NSCs form after major mergers in quenched dwarf galaxies.
NSCs contain two stellar populations with >1 billion years age difference.
Some globular clusters may be accreted NSCs, as suggested by their stellar populations.
Abstract
Nuclear Star Clusters (NSCs) are amongst the densest stellar systems in the Universe and are found at the centres of many bright spiral and elliptical galaxies, and up to 40% of dwarf galaxies. However, their formation mechanisms, and possible links to globular clusters (GCs), remain debated. This paper uses the EDGE simulations - a collection of zoom-in, cosmological simulations of isolated dwarf galaxies -- to present a new formation mechanism for NSCs. We find that, at a gas spatial and mass resolution of pc and M, respectively, NSCs naturally emerge in a subset of our EDGE dwarfs with redshift-zero halo masses of M. These dwarfs are quenched by reionisation, but retain a significant reservoir of gas that is unable to cool and form stars. Sometime after reionisation, the dwarfs then undergo a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
