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Two major accretion epochs in M31 from two distinct populations of globular clusters.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Mackey, Dougal 
Lewis, Geraint F 
Brewer, Brendon J 
Ferguson, Annette MN 
Veljanoski, Jovan 

Abstract

Large galaxies grow through the accumulation of dwarf galaxies1,2. In principle it is possible to trace this growth history via the properties of a galaxy's stellar halo3-5. Previous investigations of the galaxy Messier 31 (M31, Andromeda) have shown that outside a galactocentric radius of 25 kiloparsecs the population of halo globular clusters is rotating in alignment with the stellar disk6,7, as are more centrally located clusters8,9. The M31 halo also contains coherent stellar substructures, along with a smoothly distributed stellar component10-12. Many of the globular clusters outside a radius of 25 kiloparsecs are associated with the most prominent substructures, but some are part of the smooth halo13. Here we report an analysis of the kinematics of these globular clusters. We find two distinct populations rotating perpendicular to each other. The rotation axis for the population associated with the smooth halo is aligned with the rotation axis for the plane of dwarf galaxies14 that encircles M31. We interpret these separate cluster populations as arising from two major accretion epochs, probably separated by billions of years. Stellar substructures from the first epoch are gone, but those from the more recent second epoch still remain.

Description

Keywords

5101 Astronomical Sciences, 51 Physical Sciences

Journal Title

Nature

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0028-0836
1476-4687

Volume Title

574

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Science and Technology Facilities Council (ST/N000927/1)
Science and Technology Facilities Council (ST/N005805/1)