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Merging Massive Star Clusters as Building Blocks of Dwarf Galaxies ? | M. Fellhauer
; P. Kroupa
; | Date: |
5 Dec 2001 | Subject: | astro-ph | Affiliation: | Inst. Theor. Phys. & Astrophys., Univ. Kiel, Germany | Abstract: | Recent spectroscopic observations of galaxies in the Fornax-Cluster reveal nearly unresolved `star-like’ objects with red-shifts appropriate to the Fornax-Cluster. These objects have intrinsic sizes of about 100 pc and absolute B-band magnitudes in the range -14 < M_B < -11.5 mag and lower limits for the central surface brightness mu_B >= 23 mag/arcsec^2 (Phillipps et al. 2001, Hilker et al. 1999), and so appear to constitute a new population of ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs). Such compact dwarfs were predicted to form from the amalgamation of stellar super-clusters (= clusters of star clusters; not to confuse with super stellar clusters (SSC)) by P. Kroupa (1998), which are rich aggregates of young massive star clusters (YMCs) that can form in collisions between gas-rich galaxies. Here we present the evolution of super-clusters in a tidal field. The YMCs merge on a few super-cluster crossing times. Super-clusters that are initially as concentrated and massive as Knot S in the interacting Antennae galaxies (Whitmore et al. 1999) evolve to merger objects that are long-lived and show properties comparable to the newly discovered UCDs. | Source: | arXiv, astro-ph/0112109 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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