Intracluster globular clusters as tracers of the mass assembly of the Hydra I galaxy cluster
Felipe S. Lohmann, Magda Arnaboldi, Michael Hilker, Andreas Burkert, Marilena Spavone, Ortwin Gerhard, Marina Rejkuba, Marco Mirabile, Michele Cantiello, Enrichetta Iodice

TL;DR
This study uses globular clusters as tracers to understand the mass assembly and evolution of the Hydra I galaxy cluster, revealing spatial distributions and properties linked to cluster dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a new method to constrain the evolution of the galaxy luminosity function using globular cluster properties and specific frequencies.
Findings
Red GCs follow galaxy light closely, blue GCs trace the cluster potential.
Blue GCs have higher specific frequency in outskirts, indicating ICL association.
Derived a past faint-end slope of the luminosity function consistent with high-redshift data.
Abstract
In galaxy clusters, hierarchical assembly predicts the formation of stellar substructures and intracluster light (ICL), a diffuse stellar component tracing the global cluster potential. Because these features are extremely faint, alternative tracers such as globular clusters (GCs) provide a powerful tool to study cluster assembly. We use deep VLT/FORS - and -band imaging to investigate the GC population in the nearby Hydra I galaxy cluster ( Mpc). GC candidates were selected from the colour-magnitude diagram and divided into blue and red subpopulations. We find a clear spatial dichotomy: red GCs are concentrated around the massive central galaxies NGC 3311 and NGC 3309, while blue GCs are more extended and offset from the centre, coinciding with a secondary peak of X-ray-emitting gas. In the central regions, GC spatial distributions further depend on stellar…
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