In-situ vs accreted Milky Way globular clusters: a new classification method and implications for cluster formation
Abstract
We present a new scheme for the classification of the in-situ and accreted globular clusters (GCs). The scheme uses total energy E and z-component of the orbital angular momentum and is calibrated using [Al/Fe] abundance ratio. We demonstrate that such classification results in the GC populations with distinct spatial, kinematic, and chemical abundance distributions. The in-situ GCs are distributed within the central 10 kpc of the Galaxy in a flattened configuration aligned with the MW disc, while the accreted GCs have a wide distribution of distances and a spatial distribution close to spherical. In-situ and accreted GCs have different [Fe/H] distributions with the well-known bimodality present only in the metallicity distribution of the in-situ GCs. Furthermore, the accreted and in-situ GCs are well separated in the plane of [Al/Fe]-[Mg/Fe] abundance ratios and follow distinct sequences in the age-- [Fe/H] plane. The in-situ GCs in our classification show a clear disc spin-up signature -- the increase of median Vφ at metallicities [Fe/H]≈ -1.3 -1 similar to the spin-up in the in-situ field stars. This signature signals the MW's disc formation, which occurred ≈ 11.7-12.7 Gyrs ago (or at z≈ 3.1-5.3) according to GC ages. In-situ GCs with metallicities of [Fe/H] -1.3 were thus born in the Milky Way disc, while lower metallicity in-situ GCs were born during early, turbulent, pre-disc stages of the evolution of the Galaxy and are part of its Aurora stellar component.
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