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Constraining the formation of NGC1052-DF2 from its unusual globular cluster population

Published 12 Oct 2020 in astro-ph.GA | (2010.05930v2)

Abstract: The ultra-diffuse galaxy (UDG) NGC1052-DF2 has a low dark matter content and hosts a very unusual globular cluster (GC) population, with a median luminosity $\sim4$ times higher than in most galaxies and containing about 5~per~cent of the galaxy's stars. We apply a theoretical model that predicts the initial cluster mass function as a function of the galactic environment to investigate the origin of DF2's peculiar GC system. Using the GC mass function, the model constrains the star-forming conditions in the galaxy during the formation of its GCs, $\sim9~\rm{Gyr}$ ago. We predict that the GCs formed in an environment with very high gas surface density, $\Sigma_{\rm ISM} \gtrsim 103 M_{\odot} \rm{pc}{-2}$, and strong centrifugal support, $\Omega \gtrsim 0.7~\rm{Myr}{-1}$, similar to nearby circum-nuclear starbursts and the central region of the Milky Way. These extreme conditions required to form the observed GC population imply a very high cluster formation efficiency of $\gtrsim 78$ per cent, and contrast strongly with the current diffuse nature of the galaxy. Since a nuclear starburst would lead to the rapid in-spiral of the GCs and is ruled out by the absence of a nuclear star cluster, we propose that the GCs plausibly formed during a major merger at $z\sim1.3$. The merger remnant must have undergone significant expansion of its stellar (and perhaps also its dark matter) component to reach its low present surface brightness, leading to the interesting possibility that it was the formation of DF2's extreme GC population that caused it to become a UDG. If true, this strong structural evolution would have important implications for understanding the origins of UDGs.

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