An HST/ACS view of the inhomogeneous outer halo of M31

Mackey, A. D.; Chapman, S. C.; Tanvir, N. R.; Ferguson, A. M. N.; Huxor, A.; Lewis, G. F.; Irwin, M. J.; Ibata, R. A.; Richardson, J. C.

United Kingdom, France, Australia

Abstract

We present a high precision photometric view of the stellar populations in the outer halo of M31, using data taken with the Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys. We analyse the field populations adjacent to 11 luminous globular clusters which sample the galactocentric radial range 18 <~ R <~ 100kpc and reach a photometric depth of ~2.5mag below the horizontal branch (mF814W ~ 27mag). The colour-magnitude diagrams are well populated out to ~60kpc and exhibit relatively metal-rich red giant branches, with the densest fields also showing evidence for prominent red clumps. We use the Dartmouth isochrones to construct metallicity distribution functions which confirm the presence of dominant populations with <[Fe/H]> ~ -0.6 to -1.0dex and considerable metallicity dispersions of 0.2 to 0.3dex (assuming a 10 Gyr population and scaled-solar abundances). The average metallicity over the range 30-60kpc is [Fe/H] = -0.80 +/- 0.14dex, with no evidence for a significant radial gradient. Metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] <= -1.3) typically account for <~10-20 per cent of the population in each field, irrespective of radius. Assuming our fields are unbiased probes of the dominant stellar populations in these parts, we find that the M31 outer halo remains considerably more metal rich than that of the Milky Way out to at least 60kpc.

Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555.

E-mail: jcr@roe.ac.uk

2009 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
eHST 43