SIMBAD references

2018MNRAS.480.3279U - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 480, 3279-3301 (2018/November-1)

The origin of the 'blue tilt' of globular cluster populations in the E-MOSAICS simulations.

USHER C., PFEFFER J., BASTIAN N., KRUIJSSEN J.M.D., CRAIN R.A. and REINA-CAMPOS M.

Abstract (from CDS):

The metal-poor subpopulation of globular cluster (GC) systems exhibits a correlation between the GC average colour and luminosity, especially in those systems associated with massive elliptical galaxies. More luminous (more massive) GCs are typically redder and hence more metal-rich. This 'blue tilt' is often interpreted as a mass-metallicity relation stemming from GC self-enrichment, whereby more massive GCs retain a greater fraction of the enriched gas ejected by their evolving stars, fostering the formation of more metal-rich secondary generations. We examine the MOdelling Star cluster population Assembly In Cosmological Simulations within EAGLE (E-MOSAICS) simulations of the formation and evolution of galaxies and their GC populations, and find that their GCs exhibit a colour-luminosity relation similar to that observed in local galaxies, without the need to invoke mass-dependent self-enrichment. We find that the blue tilt is most appropriately interpreted as a dearth of massive, metal-poor GCs: the formation of massive GCs requires high interstellar gas surface densities, conditions that are most commonly fostered by the most massive, and hence most metal-rich, galaxies, at the peak epoch of GC formation. The blue tilt is therefore a consequence of the intimate coupling between the small-scale physics of GC formation and the evolving properties of interstellar gas hosted by hierarchically assembling galaxies.

Abstract Copyright: © 2018 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): globular clusters: general - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: formation - galaxies: haloes - galaxies: star formation

Simbad objects: 14

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