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Discovery of Two Ultra-diffuse Galaxies with...
Journal article

Discovery of Two Ultra-diffuse Galaxies with Unusually Bright Globular Cluster Luminosity Functions via a Mark-dependently Thinned Point Process (MATHPOP)

Abstract

We present MArk-dependently THinned POint Process (Mathpop), a novel method to infer the globular cluster (GC) counts in ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) and low-surface brightness galaxies (LSBGs). Many known UDGs have a surprisingly high ratio of GC number to surface brightness. However, standard methods to infer GC counts in UDGs face various challenges, such as photometric measurement uncertainties, GC membership uncertainties, and assumptions about the GC luminosity functions (GCLFs). Mathpop tackles these challenges using the mark-dependent thinned point process, enabling joint inference of the spatial and magnitude distributions of GCs. In doing so, Mathpop allows us to infer and quantify the uncertainties in both GC counts and GCLFs with minimal assumptions. As a precursor to Mathpop, we also address the data uncertainties coming from the selection process of GC candidates: we obtain probabilistic GC candidates instead of the traditional binary classification based on the color–magnitude diagram. We apply Mathpop to 40 LSBGs in the Perseus cluster using GC catalogs from a Hubble Space Telescope imaging program. We then compare our results to those from an independent study using the standard method. We further calibrate and validate our approach through extensive simulations. Our approach reveals two LSBGs having GCLF turnover points much brighter than the canonical value with Bayes’ factor being ∼4.5 and ∼2.5, respectively. An additional crude maximum-likelihood estimation and simulation study show that their GCLF TO points are approximately 0.9 mag and 1.1 mag brighter than the canonical value, with p-values of ∼10−8 and ∼10−5, respectively.

Authors

Li D; Eadie GM; Brown PE; Harris WE; Abraham RG; van Dokkum P; Janssens SR; Berek SC; Danieli S; Romanowsky AJ

Journal

The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 984, No. 2,

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Publication Date

May 9, 2025

DOI

10.3847/1538-4357/adc71f

ISSN

0004-637X

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