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A&A 450, 105-115 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054351
Globular cluster system and Milky Way properties revisited
E. Bica1, C. Bonatto1, B. Barbuy2 and S. Ortolani31 Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Instituto de Física, CP 15051, Porto Alegre 91501-970, RS, Brazil
e-mail: [bica;charles]@if.ufrgs.br
2 Universidade de São Paulo, Dept. de Astronomia, Rua do Matão 1226, São Paulo 05508-090, Brazil
e-mail: barbuy@astro.iag.usp.br
3 Università di Padova, Dipartimento di Astronomia, Vicolo dell'Osservatorio 2, 35122 Padova, Italy
e-mail: ortolani@pd.astro.it
(Received 13 October 2005 / Accepted 28 November 2005)
Abstract
Aims.Updated data of the 153 Galactic globular clusters are used to readdress fundamental
parameters of the Milky Way, such as the distance of the Sun to the Galactic centre, the bulge and halo
structural parameters, and cluster destruction rates.
Methods.We build a reduced sample that has been decontaminated of all the clusters younger than 10 Gyr and
of those with retrograde
orbits and/or evidence of relation to dwarf galaxies. The reduced sample contains 116 globular
clusters that are tested for whether they were formed in the primordial collapse.
Results.The 33 metal-rich globular clusters (
) of the reduced sample basically extend to the
Solar circle and are distributed over a region with the projected axial-ratios typical of an oblate spheroidal,
. Those outside this region appear to be related to
accretion. The 81 metal-poor globular clusters span a nearly spherical region of axial-ratios
extending from the central parts to the outer halo, although several clusters in the
external region still require detailed studies to unravel their origin as accretion or collapse. A new
estimate of the Sun's distance to the Galactic centre, based on the symmetries of the spatial distribution
of 116 globular clusters, is provided with a considerably smaller uncertainty than in previous determinations
using globular clusters,
. The metal-rich and metal-poor radial-density distributions
flatten for
and are represented well over the full Galactocentric distance range both
by a power-law with a core-like term and Sérsic's law; at large distances they fall off as
.
Conclusions.Both metallicity components appear to have a common origin that is different
from that of the dark matter halo. Structural similarities between the metal-rich and metal-poor radial
distributions and the stellar halo are consistent with a scenario where part of the reduced sample
was formed in the primordial collapse and part was accreted in an early period of merging.
This applies to the bulge as well, suggesting an early merger affecting the central parts of the
Galaxy. The present decontamination procedure is not sensitive to all accretions (especially prograde)
during the first Gyr, since the observed radial density profiles still preserve traces of the
earliest merger(s). We estimate that the present globular cluster population corresponds to
of the original one. The fact that the volume-density radial distributions of
the metal-rich and metal-poor globular clusters of the reduced sample follow both a core-like
power-law, and Sérsic's law indicates that we are dealing with spheroidal subsystems at all
scales.
Key words: Galaxy: globular clusters: general -- Galaxy: structure
SIMBAD Objects
Tables at the CDS
© ESO 2006
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