The Metallicity Distribution in the Halo Stars of NGC 5128: Implications for Galaxy Formation
Abstract
The Hubble Space Telescope has been used to obtain WFPC2 (V,I) photometry for
a sample of 10,000 red giant stars in the outer halo of the giant elliptical
NGC 5128. Comparison with the fiducial RGBs of Milky Way globular clusters and
model isochrones demonstrates that this outer-halo population is completely
dominated by old stars, with an extremely broad metallicity range extending
from the most metal-poor Galactic globulars at [Fe/H] = -2 up to Solar
abundance. By interpolation within the fiducial lines we derive the metallicity
distribution function (MDF) for the halo, which turns out to have a distinct
two-component structure: about 2/3 of the stars belong to a sharply peaked
metal-richer component ([Fe/H] = -0.3, sigma = 0.22 dex), while the remaining
one-third belong to a more extended metal-poor distribution sloping gradually
down to low metallicity. The MDF can be remarkably well matched by a simple
closed-box model of chemical enrichment, where the first component starts with
an initial abundance Z_0 =0 and the second component with Z_0 = 0.18 Z_Sun. A
basic "in situ" formation picture with two distinct epochs of star formation
fits the observations better than other models involving major contributions
from accretions or mergers.