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A new classification of ex situ and in situ Galactic globular clusters based on a method trained on Milky Way analogues in the TNG50 cosmological simulations

Boldrini, Pierre ; Di Matteo, Paola ; Laporte, Chervin ; Agertz, Oscar LU ; Khoperskov, Sergey and Pagnini, Giulia (2025) In Astronomy and Astrophysics 704.
Abstract

We present a novel method combining existing cosmological simulations and orbital integration to study the hierarchical assembly of globular cluster (GC) populations in the Milky Way (MW). Our method models the growth and evolution of GC populations across various galactic environments as well as the dynamical friction and mass loss experienced by these objects. This allowed us to follow the trajectory of ~18 000 GCs over cosmic time in 198 MW-like galaxies from TNG50. This cosmological-scale tracking of the dynamics of in situ and ex situ GC populations with such a large statistical sample allowed us to confirm the presence of an overlap between the two populations in MW-like galaxies, occurring below an energy threshold of (Formula... (More)

We present a novel method combining existing cosmological simulations and orbital integration to study the hierarchical assembly of globular cluster (GC) populations in the Milky Way (MW). Our method models the growth and evolution of GC populations across various galactic environments as well as the dynamical friction and mass loss experienced by these objects. This allowed us to follow the trajectory of ~18 000 GCs over cosmic time in 198 MW-like galaxies from TNG50. This cosmological-scale tracking of the dynamics of in situ and ex situ GC populations with such a large statistical sample allowed us to confirm the presence of an overlap between the two populations in MW-like galaxies, occurring below an energy threshold of (Formula presented)|Ecirc(rhm)|, where E circ(rhm) is the energy of a circular orbit at the galaxy’s stellar half-mass radius rhm. Our results challenge the validity of current classification schemes commonly adopted in the literature, which ultimately fail to provide a clear separation between the two populations. Instead, they tend to isolate only a subset of the ex situ GCs. More precisely, we argue that it is highly unlikely to find in situ clusters at (Formula presented)|Ecirc(rhm)|, and that the real challenge lies in distinguishing the two populations below this energy threshold. In this context, we provide new predictions regarding the origins of the MW’s GCs observed with Gaia, as well as a comparison with existing literature. Additionally, we highlight that even if ex situ clusters share a common origin, they inevitably lose their dynamical coherence in the E–Lz space within MW-like galaxies. We observe a dispersion of GC groups as a function of E and Lz , primarily driven by the evolution of the galactic potential over time and by dynamical friction, respectively.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Galaxy: formation, Galaxy: structure, globular clusters: general, methods: numerical
in
Astronomy and Astrophysics
volume
704
article number
A81
publisher
EDP Sciences
external identifiers
  • scopus:105024722121
ISSN
0004-6361
DOI
10.1051/0004-6361/202555964
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bd0acbc4-8ea6-4f36-aaf0-529b99ddebd6
date added to LUP
2026-02-13 10:27:13
date last changed
2026-02-13 10:28:17
@article{bd0acbc4-8ea6-4f36-aaf0-529b99ddebd6,
  abstract     = {{<p>We present a novel method combining existing cosmological simulations and orbital integration to study the hierarchical assembly of globular cluster (GC) populations in the Milky Way (MW). Our method models the growth and evolution of GC populations across various galactic environments as well as the dynamical friction and mass loss experienced by these objects. This allowed us to follow the trajectory of ~18 000 GCs over cosmic time in 198 MW-like galaxies from TNG50. This cosmological-scale tracking of the dynamics of in situ and ex situ GC populations with such a large statistical sample allowed us to confirm the presence of an overlap between the two populations in MW-like galaxies, occurring below an energy threshold of (Formula presented)|E<sub>circ</sub>(r<sup>∗</sup><sub>hm</sub>)|, where E circ(r<sup>∗</sup><sub>hm</sub>) is the energy of a circular orbit at the galaxy’s stellar half-mass radius r<sup>∗</sup><sub>hm</sub>. Our results challenge the validity of current classification schemes commonly adopted in the literature, which ultimately fail to provide a clear separation between the two populations. Instead, they tend to isolate only a subset of the ex situ GCs. More precisely, we argue that it is highly unlikely to find in situ clusters at (Formula presented)|E<sub>circ</sub>(r<sup>∗</sup><sub>hm</sub>)|, and that the real challenge lies in distinguishing the two populations below this energy threshold. In this context, we provide new predictions regarding the origins of the MW’s GCs observed with Gaia, as well as a comparison with existing literature. Additionally, we highlight that even if ex situ clusters share a common origin, they inevitably lose their dynamical coherence in the E–L<sub>z</sub> space within MW-like galaxies. We observe a dispersion of GC groups as a function of E and L<sub>z</sub> , primarily driven by the evolution of the galactic potential over time and by dynamical friction, respectively.</p>}},
  author       = {{Boldrini, Pierre and Di Matteo, Paola and Laporte, Chervin and Agertz, Oscar and Khoperskov, Sergey and Pagnini, Giulia}},
  issn         = {{0004-6361}},
  keywords     = {{Galaxy: formation; Galaxy: structure; globular clusters: general; methods: numerical}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{EDP Sciences}},
  series       = {{Astronomy and Astrophysics}},
  title        = {{A new classification of ex situ and in situ Galactic globular clusters based on a method trained on Milky Way analogues in the TNG50 cosmological simulations}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202555964}},
  doi          = {{10.1051/0004-6361/202555964}},
  volume       = {{704}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}