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PHANGS-HST: Globular Cluster Systems in 17 Nearby Spiral Galaxies

Authors :
Floyd, Matthew
Chandar, Rupali
Whitmore, Bradley C.
Thilker, David A.
Lee, Janice C.
Pauline, Rachel E.
Thomas, Zion L.
Berschback, William J.
Henny, Kiana F.
Dale, Daniel A.
Klessen, Ralf S.
Schinnerer, Eva
Grasha, Kathryn
Boquien, Mederic
Larson, Kirsten L.
Deger, Sinan
Barnes, Ashley T.
Leroy, Adam K.
Rosolowsky, Erik
Williams, Thomas G.
Ubeda, Leonardo
Source :
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 167, Issue 3, id.95, 16 pp. March 2024
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present new catalogs of likely globular clusters (GCs) in 17 nearby spiral galaxies studied as part of the PHANGS-HST Treasury Survey. The galaxies were imaged in five broad-band filters from the near-ultraviolet through the $I$ band. PHANGS-HST has produced catalogs of stellar clusters of all ages by selecting extended sources (from multiple concentration index measurements) followed by morphological classification (centrally concentrated and symmetric or asymmetric, multiple peaks, contaminant) by visually examining the V-band image and separately by a machine-learning algorithm which classified larger samples to reach fainter limits. From both cluster catalogs, we select an initial list of candidate GCs to have $B-V \geq 0.5$ and $V-I \geq 0.73$~mag, then remove likely contaminants (including reddened young clusters, background galaxies misclassified by the neural network, and chance superpositions/blends of stars) after a careful visual inspection. We find that $\approx86$ % of the color-selected candidates classified as spherically symmetric, and $\approx68$ of those classified as centrally concentrated but asymmetric are likely to be GCs. The luminosity functions of the GC candidates in 2 of our 17 galaxies, NGC 628 and NGC 3627, are atypical, and continue to rise at least 1~mag fainter than the expected turnover near $M_V \sim -7.4$. These faint candidate GCs have more extended spatial distributions than their bright counterparts, and may reside in the disk rather than the bulge/halo, similar to faint GCs previously discovered in M101. These faint clusters may be somewhat younger since the age-metallicity degeneracy makes it difficult to determine precise cluster ages from integrated colors once they reach $\approx1$~Gyr.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 167, Issue 3, id.95, 16 pp. March 2024
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2403.13908
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad1889