The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)1 The Newly-Discovered Remote Globular Cluster System.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
David Cole, University of Leicester Walter Dehnen; Mark Wilkinson – University of Leicester; Justin Read – ETH Zurich 29 June 2012.
Advertisements

Astronomical Solutions to Galactic Dark Matter Will Sutherland Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge.
The Outermost Regions of Galactic Disks Ken Freeman RSAA, ANU MNRF Symposium NGC 6946: WSRT, Tom Oosterloo.
Seeing the Skies with PAndA’s Eyes: Galactic Archaeology in our own backyard Geraint F. Lewis Sydney Institute for Astronomy The University of Sydney.
Formation of Globular Clusters in  CDM Cosmology Oleg Gnedin (University of Michigan)
From the Milky Way to Andromeda: A PAndAS View of Galactic Halos Brendan McMonigal Supervisor - Geraint F. Lewis Sydney Institute for Astronomy School.
Chapter 15 The Milky Way Galaxy.
TeV Particle Astrophysics, Venice, August 29, 2007J. Siegal-Gaskins1 Signatures of ΛCDM substructure in tidal debris Jennifer Siegal-Gaskins in collaboration.
Tidal Streams in the Milky Way (and M31) Jorge Peñarrubia (University of Victoria, Canada) & David Martinez Delgado (IAC, Spain) 22th of June 2006 Valencia.
The M-81 Group of Galaxies Brian Fleming Stephanie LaMassa Seamus Riley (The Chunky Ponies)
Tidal Disruption of Globular Clusters in Dwarf Galaxies J. Peñarrubia Santiago 2011 in collaboration with: M.Walker; G. Gilmore & S. Koposov.
Dwarf Galaxies and Their Destruction... Marla Geha Carnegie Observatories (OCIW) Collaborators: P. Guhathakurta (UCSC), R. van der Marel (STScI)
Galactic archaeology Rodrigo Ibata Observatoire de Strasbourg.
Breaking tidal stream degeneracies with LAMOST Jorge Peñarrubia (IoA) Cambridge 2nd December 08.
Dark Halos of Fossil Groups and Clusters Observations and Simulations Ali Dariush, Trevor Ponman Graham Smith University of Birmingham, UK Frazer Pearce.
The Milky Way PHYS390 Astrophysics Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 19.
The Milky Way Galaxy James Binney Oxford University.
Dark Matter and Galaxy Formation (Section 3: Galaxy Data vs. Simulations) Joel R. Primack 2009, eprint arXiv: Presented by: Michael Solway.
A Galactic halo road map The halo stars : where, whither, whence? Chris Thom, Jyrki Hänninen, Johan Holmberg, Chris Flynn Tuorla Observatory Swinburne.
Summary Of the Structure of the Milky Way The following graphical data is meant to help you understand WHY astronomers believe they know the structure.
Galaxy Formation and Evolution Galactic Archaeology Chris Brook Modulo 15 Room 509
The Milky Way Center, Shape Globular cluster system
Levels of organization: Stellar Systems Stellar Clusters Galaxies Galaxy Clusters Galaxy Superclusters The Universe Everyone should know where they live:
The Milky Way Galaxy.
Kinematics of Globular Clusters in Giant Elliptical Galaxies Hong Soo Park 1, Myung Gyoon Lee 1, Ho Seong Hwang 2, Nobuo Arimoto 3, Naoyuki Tamura 4, Masato.
The Dual Origin of a Simulated Milky Way Halo Adi Zolotov (N.Y.U.), Beth Willman (Haverford), Fabio Governato, Chris Brook (University of Washington, Seattle),
Effects of baryons on the structure of massive galaxies and clusters Oleg Gnedin University of Michigan Collisionless N-body simulations predict a nearly.
The Metal-Poor Halo of the Andromeda Spiral Galaxy Jason Kalirai (University of California at Santa Cruz) Hubble Fellows Symposium, Baltimore MD April.
8th Sino-German Workshop Kunming, Feb 23-28, 2009 Milky Way vs. M31: a Tale of Two Disks Jinliang HOU In collaboration with : Ruixiang CHANG, Shiyin SHEN,
The Evolution of Quasars and Massive Black Holes “Quasar Hosts and the Black Hole-Spheroid Connection”: Dunlop 2004 “The Evolution of Quasars”: Osmer 2004.
IAS, June 2008 Caty Pilachowski. Visible in the Southern Sky Listed in Ptolemy's catalog Discovered by Edmond Halley in 1677 –non-stellar –"luminous spot.
The accretion history of the halo of M31 as probed by its globular cluster population Avon Huxor et al. Astrophysics Group HH Wills Physics Laboratory.
MNRAS, submitted. Galaxy evolution Evolution in global properties reasonably well established What drives this evolution? How does it depend on environment?
Galaxies with Active Nuclei Chapter 14:. Active Galaxies Galaxies with extremely violent energy release in their nuclei (pl. of nucleus).  “active galactic.
Another Non-segregated Blue Stragglers Population in a Globular Cluster: the Case of NGC2419 Another Non-segregated Blue Stragglers Population in a Globular.
Myung Gyoon Lee With Hong Soo Park & In Sung Jang Seoul National University, Korea Multiwavelength surveys: Formation and Evolution of Galaxies from the.
Myung Gyoon Lee Seoul National University, Korea The 6 th KIAS Workshop on Cosmology and Structure Formation, Nov 4-7, 2014, KIAS, Seoul 1.
Major dry-merger rate and extremely massive major dry-mergers of BCGs Deng Zugan June 31st Taiwan.
E. K. Grebel Globular Clusters: The Dwarf Galaxy Contribution1 Globular Clusters: The Dwarf Galaxy Contribution Eva K. Grebel Astronomisches Rechen-Institut.
Astronomy 404/CSI 769 Extragalactic Astronomy
Subaru Wide-Field Survey of M87 Globular Cluster Populations N.Arimoto (NAOJ) N.Tamura, R.Sharples (Durham) M.Onodera (Tokyo, NAOJ), K.Ohta(Kyoto) J.-C.Cuillandre.
Galactic structure and star counts Du cuihua BATC meeting, NAOC.
UNIT 1 The Milky Way Galaxy.
Group Evolution Multi-wavelength Survey (GEMS) Duncan A. Forbes Centre for Astrophysics & Supercomputing, Swinburne University.
Lecture 18 Stellar populations. Stellar clusters Open clusters: contain stars loose structure Globular clusters: million stars centrally.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Clicker Questions Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy.
Globular Clusters. A globular cluster is an almost spherical conglomeration of 100,000 to 1,000,000 stars of different masses that have practically.
Why do globular clusters have more than one main sequence? Ref: Gratton et al. 2012, A&ARv, 20, 50.
Globular Cluster - Dwarf Galaxy Connection W1: a case study in our neighborhood Ann Arbor, Aug Beth Willman W1 DEIMOS Observations M.Geha (HIA/Yale)
The Ultra-Faint Milky Way Satellites
The contribution of the Sgr dSph to the globular Cluster System of the Milky Way Recovery of the original conditions of the Sgr dSph Michele Bellazzini.
June 5, 2006 AAS/Calgary Stellar Populations: Old Stars in the Nearest E Galaxy From Field Stars to Globular Clusters.
Galactic Archaeology wishy-washy Nobuo Arimoto NAOJ.
The Gaia-ESO Survey Sofia Randich INAF-Arcetri Survey Co-PIs: Gerry Gilmore & Sofia Randich 350+ Co-Is (mostly from Europe, but not only) 90++ institutes.
Alan McConnachie Mike Irwin, Annette Ferguson, Nial Tanvir, Rodrigo Ibata, Geraint Lewis, Scott Chapman, Avon Huxor Alan McConnachie Mike Irwin, Annette.
Dark Matter and Rotational Motion e.t. revised feb 09.
The Evolution of Intracluster Light Craig Rudick Department of Astronomy Case Western Reserve University.
Tuesday Summary Clusters - Galaxy assembly history through cosmological simulations can form bimodal cluster distributions. - Universal shape of the joint.
Galaxies: Our Galaxy: the Milky Way. . The Structure of the Milky Way Galactic Plane Galactic Center The actual structure of our Milky Way is very hard.
The High Redshift Universe Next Door
Milky Way: Galactic Structure and Dynamics Milky Way has spiral structure Galactic Bulge surrounds the Center Powerful radio source Sagittarius A at Center.
KASI Galaxy Evolution Journal Club A Massive Protocluster of Galaxies at a Redshift of z ~ P. L. Capak et al. 2011, Nature, in press (arXive: )
The Milky Way Galaxy. What are each of these?
Simulating the Production of Intra-Cluster Light Craig Rudick Department of Astronomy CERCA - 02/17/05.
Gaia ITNG2013 School, Tenerife Ken Freeman, Lecture 4: the stellar halo September 2013.
Globular Clusters Globular clusters are clusters of stars which contain stars of various stages in their evolution. An H-R diagram for a globular cluster.
The prolate shape of the Galactic halo Amina Helmi Kapteyn Astronomical Institute.
Pete Kuzma PhD student, Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics
New Clusters in the Halo of M31
William E. Harris McMaster University
Presentation transcript:

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)1 The Newly-Discovered Remote Globular Cluster System of M31 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU) In collaboration with:  Avon Huxor (Bristol)  Annette Ferguson (Edinburgh)  Mike Irwin (Cambridge)  Nial Tanvir (Leicester)  Alan McConnachie (HIA)  Nicolas Martin (MPIA)  and many more…

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)2 GCs – why should we care? No dark energy or (non-baryonic) dark matter… Boring!  Actually, GCs are central to many fields of astrophysics.  They are relatively simple astrophysical objects (ie, not galaxies).  Roughly spherical, single(?) stellar populations.  Ubiquitous in galaxies above a certain (low) mass limit.  Most are compact and luminous (ie, visible from a distance!).  Testing grounds for stellar evolution models (binaries, exotica).  Laboratories for gravitational dynamics.  A fossil record of host galaxy formation & evolution.  Trace star formation, chemical evolution, mergers, kinematics.  Local probes of the early Universe (cosmological significance?).

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)3 Milky Way globular cluster system: There are ~ 150 known globular clusters associated with our Galaxy.  These extend from Galactic centre to ~ 120 kpc in the halo.  Metallicities ranging from [Fe/H] ~ -2.4 – 0.0.  Comprise an inhomogeneous group in terms of masses, densities, spatial locations, ages, orbits, horizontal branch morphologies…  Following the original suggestion by Searle & Zinn (1978), there has been accumulation of evidence for many GCs having been accreted into the Milky Way (particularly remote clusters).  See Zinn (1993), Mackey & Gilmore (2004), Forbes & Bridges (2010).  Verification of this scenario with discovery of Sagittarius dwarf.  However, still the only concrete, unambiguous example.

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)4 Sagittarius dwarf

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)5 Globular clusters in M31:  M31 provides a contrasting system to the Milky Way – what can we learn from its GCs about the similarities and differences between the two galaxies… is the MW typical? Also, an extended parameter space for interesting objects. (M31 has at least 450 GCs..!) PAndAS (and earlier surveys) are opening a new window on the outer halo globular cluster system of M31.

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)6 The Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS) CFHT / MegaCam Large program aimed at surveying entire M31 halo to ~150 kpc (and M33 halo to ~50 kpc).  Running 2008B – 2010B  Limiting depth of g = 25.5 and i = 24.5 (~3-4 mag RGB)  Detect structures to SB of ~32-33 mag/arcsec 2  Allowing discovery of many new globular clusters…

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)7 The Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey PAndAS A. McConnachie et al. 2009, Nature, 461, 66 Status after 2008B

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)8  PAndAS is notable for its fantastic data quality.  Seeing is typically better than ~ 0.7 arcsec (!)  Removes (for the first time) almost all the ambiguity involved when identifying globular clusters.

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)9 The “new” remote GC system of M31:  Until very recently only GCs in the (very) inner regions (~disk) of M31 had been catalogued and studied.  With PAndAS we are now characterising the remote, outer halo globular cluster population for the first time.  The Revised Bologna Catalogue (RBC) lists 34 M31 GCs outside 15 kpc, of which only 3 lie outside 30 kpc.  We have discovered ~85 new globular clusters lying outside 15 kpc in M31, nearly 65 of which are outside 30 kpc (to >120 kpc). (very many compared to Milky Way!)  Huxor et al. (2005, 2008, 2009, 2010); Mackey et al (2006, 2007).

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)10 (Huxor et al. 2008, MNRAS, 385, 1989) The colours of outer M31 globulars are very similar to Galactic counterparts. Suggests similar ages and metallicities. However… noticeable difference between the luminosities of clusters. Outer MW globulars are typically sub-luminous; M31 globulars are bright.

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)11 MGC1 in M31 (Gemini/GMOS) – R p = 117 kpc

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)12 MGC1 is ancient, metal-poor and significantly closer than M31. Combined with large projected radius  MGC1 is ~ 200 kpc from M31 (!) It has an extended structure consistent with models of isolated GCs. (Mackey et al. 2010, MNRAS, 401, 533)

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)13 Extended Clusters in M31:  Cluster-like objects with unusually extended structures.  Originally discovered by Huxor et al. (2005) from INT / WFC.  Followed by many more from PAndAS…  Of the ~ 85 new GCs outside 15 kpc, ~ 25 – 30 are extended.  Also seen in M33 and NGC 6822 but maybe not in our Galaxy.  Populate an unusual region of the size-luminosity plane.

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)14 From HST/ACS imaging (GO-10394), see Mackey et al. (2006, 2007) (Mackey et al. 2007, ApJ, 655, L85)

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)15 From HST/ACS imaging (GO-10394), see Mackey et al. (2006, 2007) (Mackey et al. 2006, ApJ, 653, L105)

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)16 Dwarf galaxies Star clusters “Simple” stellar populations; No dark matter. Complex stellar populations; DM dominated. (Huxor et al. 2010, MNRAS, nearly submitted)

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)17 Spatial distribution of remote M31 GCs: (Huxor et al. 2010, MNRAS, nearly submitted)  Azimuthally averaged density profile shows a striking break.  This is also seen in the metal-poor halo population.  Evidence for the accretion of GCs into the outer halo…

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)18

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)19

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)20 If the clusters were smoothly distributed azimuthally, what would the distribution of surrounding stellar densities look like? Quite different from what we observe which is biased to higher densities. The two distributions drawn from same parent with only ~ 1.3% probability. (Mackey et al., 2010, ApJ, 717, L11)

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)21 (Mackey et al., 2010, ApJ, 717, L11) Streams without clusters are in the minority. This may suggest that most streams in the M31 halo are due to the accretion of a few larger progenitors. What can we learn about these galaxies from the clusters? Future work will fold in radial velocity info (in progress)…

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)22 (Mackey et al., 2010, ApJ, 717, L11) Summary & Conclusions:  M31 has many more remote GCs than the Milky Way, extending further out and with a wider variety of properties.  So far, their colours appear consistent with being ancient and metal-poor (more work in progress).  Their radial profile shows a clear break at ~30 kpc, mirrored in the metal-poor field population.  Their spatial distribution is not smooth, and shows a statistically significant correlation with underlying field substructures.  Our results are strong evidence that the majority of the remote M31 GC system has been assembled from the accretion of cluster-bearing satellite galaxies (cf. Milky Way).

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)23 R p = 125 kpc!

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)24

The remote globular cluster system of M31 LAMOST Workshop, 19 th July 2010 Dougal Mackey (RSAA, ANU)25