SCYON Abstract
Received on August 19 2002
Extragalactic Globular Clusters in the Near Infrared I: A comparison
Authors | Markus Kissler-Patig 1, Jean P. Brodie 2, Dante Minniti 3 |
Affiliation | 1 ESO, Garching, Germany, 2 UCO/Lick Observatory, Santa Cruz, USA, 3 U.Catolica, Santiago, Chile |
Accepted by | Astronomy & Astrophysics |
Contact | mkissler@eso.org |
URL | http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/0206140 |
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Abstract
We compare optical and near infrared colours of globular clusters in
M87, the central giant elliptical in Virgo, and NGC 4478, an
intermediate luminosity galaxy in Virgo, close in projection to
M87. Combining V and I photometry obtained with the WFPC2 on HST
and Ks photometry obtained with the NIRC on Keck 1, we find the broad
range in colour and previously detected bi-modality in M87. We confirm
that NGC 4478 only hosts a blue sub-population of globular clusters
and now show that these clusters' V-I and V-K colours are very
similar to those of the halo globular clusters in Milky Way and
M31. Most likely, a metal-rich sub-population never formed around this
galaxy (rather than having formed and been destroyed later), probably
because its metal-rich gas was stripped during its passage through the
centre of the Virgo cluster.
The V-I, V-K colours are close to the predicted colours from SSP
models for old populations. However, M87 hosts a few red clusters that
are best explained by intermediate ages (a few Gyr). Generally, there
is evidence that the red, metal-rich sub-population has a complex
colour structure and is itself composed of clusters spanning a large
metallicity and, potentially, age range. This contrasts with the blue,
metal-poor population which appears very homogeneous in all galaxies
observed so far.