The Nuclear Star Cluster of M 74: a fossil record of the very early stages of a star-forming galaxy
Francesca Pinna (1,2,3), Nils Hoyer (3), Jairo M\'endez Abreu (2,1), Adriana de Lorenzo C\'aceres Rodriguez (2,1), Nadine Neumayer (3), M\'ed\'eric Boquien (4), Salvador Cardona Barrero (2,1), Daniel A. Dale (5), Ivan S. Gerasimov (4), Kathryn Grasha (6), Ralf S. Klessen (7,8)

TL;DR
This study investigates the nuclear star cluster in galaxy M 74, revealing it is very old and metal-poor, contrasting with the younger, metal-rich surrounding regions, indicating passive evolution over billions of years.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-dimensional spectro-photometric decomposition method to analyze unresolved nuclear star clusters in star-forming galaxies.
Findings
NSC in M 74 is very old and metal-poor.
NSC shows no signs of recent growth or gas inflow.
Host galaxy's central region is younger and more metal-rich.
Abstract
Nuclear star clusters (NSC) are dense and compact stellar systems, of sizes of few parsecs, located at galactic centers. Their properties and formation mechanisms seem to be tightly linked to the evolution of the host galaxy, with potentially different formation channels for late- and early-type galaxies (respectively, LTGs and ETGs). While most observations target ETGs, here we focus on the NSC in M~74 (NGC~628), a relatively massive, gas-rich and star-forming spiral galaxy, part of the PHANGS survey. We analyzed the central arcmin of the PHANGS-MUSE mosaic, in which the NSC is not spatially resolved. We analyzed the NSC stellar populations in a point spread function (PSF) aperture, and compared it to the host galaxy. Within the PSF size, the NSC is contaminated by the host-galaxy light. We performed a two-dimensional spectro-photometric decomposition of the MUSE cube, employing a…
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