Omega Centauri: Nucleus of a Milky Way Dwarf Spheroidal?
S.R. Majewski (1), R. J. Patterson (1), D. I. Dinescu (1), W. Y., Johnson(1), J. C. Ostheimer(1), W. E. Kunkel(2), C. Palma(1) ((1), University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA (2) Las Campanas, Observatory, La Serena Chile)

TL;DR
This study investigates Omega Centauri's unusual metallicity distribution and retrograde orbit, proposing it as the remnant nucleus of a dwarf galaxy disrupted by the Milky Way, with implications for galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed metallicity and orbital data supporting the hypothesis that Omega Centauri is a stripped dwarf galaxy nucleus, a novel perspective among globular clusters.
Findings
Omega Cen has a wide metallicity distribution with a peak at [Fe/H]=-1.7.
Its orbit is retrograde, nearly coplanar with the Milky Way disk.
The properties support it being the remnant nucleus of a disrupted dwarf galaxy.
Abstract
We focus on two aspects of Omega Cen that are rather uncharacteristic of globular clusters: its metallicity distribution and its orbit. We use (1) a Washington (M-T_2,M)_o color-magnitude diagram containing 130,000 stars, (2) DDO51 photometry to separate out giants from field dwarfs, and (3) a mapping of (M-T_2,M-DDO51)_o colors to [Fe/H] to derive a metallicity distribution function (MDF) for Omega Cen. The MDF is corrected for field giant contamination by a radial velocity membership study of a subsample of stars spanning all abundances. As with previous studies, the MDF is very wide with a peak near [Fe/H]=-1.7 and extending to both higher and lower abundance, but with few stars having [Fe/H] >~ -1.2. The orbit of Omega Cen is strongly retrograde, has small apogalacticon and is almost coplanar with the Milky Way disk -- i.e., an orbit unlike any known for almost all Galactic globular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
