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A&A 447, 877-890 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053393
Structural parameters from ground-based observations of newly discovered globular clusters in NGC 5128
M. Gómez1, D. Geisler1, W. E. Harris2, T. Richtler1, G. L. H. Harris3 and K. A. Woodley21 Grupo de Astronomía, Depto. de Física, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160, Concepción, Chile
e-mail: matias@astro-udec.cl
2 Department of Physics and Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton ON L8S 4M1, Canada
3 Department of Physics, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3G1, Canada
(Received 10 May 2005 / Accepted 17 October 2005)
Abstract
We have investigated a number of globular cluster candidates from a recent wide-field
study by Harris et al. (2004a, AJ, 128, 712) of the giant elliptical galaxy
NGC 5128
.
We used the Magellan I telescope + MagIC camera under excellent seeing conditions
(
) and obtained very high resolution images for a sample of 44 candidates.
Of these, 15 appear to be bonafide globular clusters in
NGC 5128
while the rest are either
foreground stars or background galaxies. We also serendipitously discovered 18 new
cluster candidates in the same fields. Our images allow us to study the light
profiles of the likely clusters, all of which are well resolved.
This is the first ground-based study of structural parameters for globular clusters
outside the Local Group. We compare the psf-deconvolved profiles with King models
and derive structural parameters, ellipticities and surface brightnesses.
We compare the derived structural properties with those of other well-studied
globular cluster systems. In general, our clusters are similar in size, ellipticity,
core radius and central surface brightness to their counterparts in other galaxies,
in particular those in
NGC 5128
observed with HST by Harris et al. (2002, AJ, 124, 1435).
However, our clusters extend to higher ellipticities and larger half-light
radii than their Galactic counterparts, as do the Harris et al. sample. Combining
our results with those of Harris et al. fills in the gaps previously existing in
parameter space and indicates that any substantial difference between presumed distinct
cluster types in this diagram, including for example the Faint Fuzzies of Larsen
& Brodie (2000, AJ, 120, 2938) and the "extended, luminous" M 31 clusters of Huxor
et al. (2005, MNRAS, 360, 1007) is now removed and that clusters form a continuum in this diagram. Indeed,
this continuum now extends to the realm of the Ultra Compact Dwarfs.
The metal-rich clusters in our sample have half-light radii that are almost twice as
large in the mean as their metal-poor counterparts, at odds with the generally accepted
trend. The possibility exists that this result could be due in part to contamination by
background galaxies. We have carried out additional analysis to quantify this contamination.
This shows that, although galaxies cannot be easily told apart
from clusters in some of the structural diagrams, the combination of excellent image quality
and Washington photometry should limit the contamination to roughly 10% of the population of
cluster candidates.
Finally, our discovery of a substantial number of new cluster candidates in the
relatively distant regions of the
NGC 5128
halo suggests that current values of the
total number of globular clusters may be underestimates.
Key words: galaxies: individual: NGC 5128 -- galaxies: star clusters -- globular clusters: general
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2006
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