SIMBAD references

2021MNRAS.502.4513W - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 502, 4513-4525 (2021/April-2)

The dynamics of the globular cluster NGC 3201 out to the Jacobi radius.

WAN Z., OLIVER W.H., BAUMGARDT H., LEWIS G.F., GIELES M., HENAULT-BRUNET V., DE BOER T., BALBINOT E., DA COSTA G. and MACKEY D.

Abstract (from CDS):

As part of a chemodynamical survey of five nearby globular clusters with 2dF/AAOmega on the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT), we have obtained kinematic information for the globular cluster NGC 3201. Our new observations confirm the presence of a significant velocity gradient across the cluster which can almost entirely be explained by the high proper motion of the cluster (∼9 mas yr–1). After subtracting the contribution of this perspective rotation, we found a remaining rotation signal with an amplitude of ∼1 km s–1 around a different axis to what we expect from the tidal tails and the potential escapers, suggesting that this rotation is internal and can be a remnant of its formation process. At the outer part, we found a rotational signal that is likely a result from potential escapers. The proper motion dispersion at large radii reported by Bianchini et al. (3.5±0.9 km s–1) has previously been attributed to dark matter. Here, we show that the LOS dispersion between 0.5 and 1 Jacobi radius is lower (2.01±0.18 km s–1), yet above the predictions from an N-body model of NGC 3201 that we ran for this study (1.48±0.14 km s–1). Based on the simulation, we find that potential escapers cannot fully explain the observed velocity dispersion. We also estimate the effect on the velocity dispersion of different amounts of stellar-mass black holes and unbound stars from the tidal tails with varying escape rates and find that these effects cannot explain the difference between the LOS dispersion and the N-body model. Given the recent discovery of tidal tail stars at large distances from the cluster, a dark matter halo is an unlikely explanation. We show that the effect of binary stars, which is not included in the N-body model, is important and can explain part of the difference in dispersion. We speculate that the remaining difference must be the result of effects not included in the N-body model, such as initial cluster rotation, velocity anisotropy, and Galactic substructure.

Abstract Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): stars: kinematics and dynamics - globular clusters: individual: NGC 3201 - dark matter

Simbad objects: 7

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