N-body+hydro simulation of an isolated Milky Way-like galaxy shows bar-spiral reconnections produce episodic star formation bursts in nuclear stellar discs and clusters after the initial bar-driven burst.
On the rotation of nuclear star clusters formed by cluster-inspirals
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Nuclear Star Clusters (NSCs) are commonly observed in the centres of most galactic nuclei, including our own Milky Way. While their study can reveal important information about the build-up of the innermost regions of galaxies, the physical processes that regulate their formation are still poorly understood. NSCs might have been formed through gas infall and subsequent in situ star formation, and/or through the infall and merging of multiple star clusters into the centre of the galaxy. Here, we investigate the viability of the latter, by studying direct N-body simulations of inspiralling clusters to the centre of a Milky-Way-like nuclear bulge that hosts a massive black hole. We find that the NSC that forms through this process can show both morphological and kinematical properties that make it comparable with observations of the Milky Way NSC, including significant rotation- a fact that has been so far attributed mainly to gas infall. We explore its kinematic evolution, to see if and how the merger history can imprint fossil records on its dynamical structure. Moreover, we study the effect of stellar foreground contamination in the line-of-sight kinematics of the NSC. Our study shows that no fine tuning of the orientation of the infalling globular clusters is necessary to result in a rotating NSC. We suggest that cluster-inspiral is a viable mechanism for the formation of rotating NSCs.
fields
astro-ph.GA 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Simulation of barred galaxy shows inside-out NSD growth and shared NSC history regulated by feedback, indicating bar timescale and cluster accretion are key to nuclear scaling relations and favoring lower Milky Way bulge mass.
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When bars and spirals conspire: recurrent build-up of the nuclear regions of disc galaxies
N-body+hydro simulation of an isolated Milky Way-like galaxy shows bar-spiral reconnections produce episodic star formation bursts in nuclear stellar discs and clusters after the initial bar-driven burst.
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SMUGGLE-Ring: Evolutionary link between nuclear star cluster and nuclear disk
Simulation of barred galaxy shows inside-out NSD growth and shared NSC history regulated by feedback, indicating bar timescale and cluster accretion are key to nuclear scaling relations and favoring lower Milky Way bulge mass.