Globular Cluster Scale Sizes in Giant Galaxies: The Case of M87 and the Role of Orbital Anisotropy and Tidal Filling
Abstract
We present new Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the outer regions of M87 in order to study its globular cluster (GC) population out to large galactocentric distances. We discuss particularly the relationship between GC effective radii rh and projected galactocentric distance Rgc. The observations suggest a shallow trend rh Rgc0.14 out to Rgc 100 kpc, in agreement with studies of other giant elliptical galaxies. To theoretically reproduce this relationship we simulate GC populations with various distributions of orbits. For an isotropic distribution of cluster orbits we find a steeper trend of rh Rgc0.4. Instead we suggest that (a) if the cluster system has an orbital anisotropy profile, where orbits become preferentially radial with increasing galactocentric distance, AND (b) if clusters become more tidally under-filling with galactocentric distance, the observed relationship can be recovered. We also apply this approach to the red and blue GC populations separately and predict that red clusters are preferentially under-filling at large Rgc and have a more isotropic distribution of orbits than blue clusters.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.