SCYON Abstract

Received on May 27 2005

VLT Spectroscopy of Globular Cluster Systems II. Spectroscopic Ages, Metallicities, and [alpha/Fe] Ratios of Globular Clusters in Early-Type Galaxies

AuthorsThomas H. Puzia (1,2), Markus Kissler-Patig (3), Daniel Thomas (4,5), Claudia Maraston (4,5), Roberto P. Saglia (4), Ralf Bender (2,4), Paul Goudfrooij (1), & Maren Hempel (3)
Affiliation1 STScI,
2 Sternwarte Muenchen,
3 ESO,
4 MPE Garching,
5 University of Oxford
Accepted byAstronomy & Astrophysics
Contacttpuzia@stsci.edu
URLhttp://www.stsci.edu/~tpuzia
Links

Abstract

An analysis of ages, metallicities, and [alpha/Fe] ratios of globular cluster systems in early-type galaxies is presented, based on Lick index measurements summarized in Puzia et al. (2004, Paper I of this series). In the light of calibration and measurement uncertainties, age-metallicity degeneracy, and the relative dynamic range of Lick indices, as well as systematics introduced by abundance ratio variations (in particular variations of [alpha/Fe] ratios), we find that the most reliable age indicator for our dataset is a combination of the Lick Balmer-line indices HgammaA, Hbeta, and HdeltaA. [MgFe]' is used as a spectroscopic metallicity indicator which is least affected by [alpha/Fe] variations. We introduce an interpolation routine to simultaneously derive ages, metallicities, and [alpha/Fe] ratios from diagnostic grids constructed from Lick indices. From a comparison of high-quality data with SSP model predictions, we find that ~2/3 of the globular clusters in early-type galaxies are older than 10 Gyr, up to 1/3 have ages in the range ~5-10 Gyr, and only a few cluster are younger than ~5 Gyr. Our sample of globular clusters covers metallicities from [Z/H] = -1.3 up to ~0.5 dex. We find that metal-rich globular clusters show on average a smaller mean age and a larger age scatter than their metal-poor counterparts. [alpha/Fe] diagnostic plots show that globular cluster systems in early-type galaxies have super-solar alpha/Fe abundance ratios with a mean [alpha/Fe] = 0.47 ± 0.06 dex and a dispersion of about 0.3 dex. We find evidence for a correlation between [alpha/Fe] and metallicity, in the sense that more metal-rich clusters exhibit lower alpha-element enhancements. [abridged]