The Next Generation Fornax Survey (NGFS): IV. Mass and Age Bimodality of Nuclear Clusters in the Fornax Core Region
Abstract
We present the analysis of 61 nucleated dwarf galaxies in the central regions (<R vir/4) of the Fornax galaxy cluster. The galaxies and their nuclei are studied as part of the Next Generation Fornax Survey (NGFS) using optical imaging obtained with the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) mounted at Blanco/CTIO and near-infrared data obtained with VIRCam at VISTA/ESO. We decompose the nucleated dwarfs in nucleus and spheroid, after subtracting the surface brightness profile of the spheroid component and studying the nucleus using PSF photometry.In general, nuclei are consistent with colors of confirmed metal-poor globular clusters, but with significantly smaller dispersion than other confirmed compact stellar systems in Fornax. We find a bimodal nucleus mass distribution with peaks located at ( M*/M)\!\!5.4 and \,6.3. These two nucleus sub-populations have different stellar population properties, the more massive nuclei are older than \!2 Gyr and have metal-poor stellar populations (Z≤0.02\,Z), while the less massive nuclei are younger than \!2 Gyr with metallicities in the range 0.02\!<\!Z/Z\!≤\!1. We find that the nucleus mass ( M nuc) vs. galaxy mass ( M gal) relation becomes shallower for less massive galaxies starting around 108\,M and the mass ratio ηn\!=\! M nuc/ M gal shows a clear anti-correlation with M gal for the lowest masses, reaching 10\%. We test current theoretical models of nuclear cluster formation and find that they cannot fully reproduce the observed trends. A likely mixture of in-situ star formation and star-cluster mergers seem to be acting during nucleus growth over cosmic time.
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.