SCYON Abstract

Received on June 1 2007

Gemini Spectroscopic Survey of Young Star Clusters in Merging/Interacting Galaxies. II. NGC 3256 Clusters

AuthorsG. Trancho (1,2), N. Bastian (3), B.W. Miller (2), and F. Schweizer (4)
Affiliation(1) Universidad de La Laguna
(2) Gemini Observatories
(3) University College London
(4) Carnegie Observatories
Accepted byAstrophysical Journal
Contactgtrancho@gemini.edu
URLhttp://www.arxiv.org/abs/0704.2577
Links

Abstract

We present Gemini optical spectroscopy of 23 young star clusters in NGC 3256. We find that the cluster ages range are from few Myr to ~150 Myr. All these clusters are relatively massive (2-40)x105Msolar and appear to be of roughly 1.5 Zsolar metallicity. The majority of the clusters in our sample follow the same rotation curve as the gas and hence were presumably formed in the molecular-gas disk. However, a western subsample of five clusters has velocities that deviate significantly from the gas rotation curve. These clusters may either belong to the second spiral galaxy of the merger or may have formed in tidal-tail gas falling back into the system. We discuss our observations in light of other known cluster populations in merging galaxies, and suggest that NGC 3256 is similar to Arp 220, and hence may become an Ultra-luminous Infrared Galaxy as the merger progresses and the star-formation rate increases. Some of the clusters which appeared as isolated in our ground-based images are clearly resolved into multiple sub-components in the HST-ACS images. The same effect has been observed in the Antennae galaxies, showing that clusters are often not formed in isolation, but instead tend to form in larger groups or cluster complexes.