Mass modelling globular clusters in the Gaia era: a method comparison using mock data from an N-body simulation of M 4
2019
As we enter a golden age for studies of internal kinematics and dynamics of Galactic globular
clusters (GCs), it is timely to assess the performance of modelling techniques in recovering
the mass, mass profile, and other dynamical properties of GCs. Here, we compare different
mass-modelling techniques (distribution-function (DF)-based models, Jeans models, and a
grid of N-body models) by applying them to mock observations from a star-by-star N-body
simulation of the GCM4 by Heggie. The mocks mimic existing and anticipated data for GCs:
surface brightness or number density profiles, local stellar mass functions, line-of-sight velocities,
and Hubble Space Telescope- and Gaia-like proper motions. We discuss the successes
and limitations of the methods. We find that multimass DF-based models, Jeans, and N-body
models provide more accurate mass profiles compared to single-mass DF-based models. We
highlight complications in fitting the kinematics in the outskirts due to energetically unbound
stars associated with the cluster (“potential escapers”, not captured by truncated DF models
nor by N-body models of clusters in isolation), which can be avoided with DF-based models
including potential escapers, or with Jeans models. We discuss ways to account for mass segregation.
For example, three-component DF-based models with freedom in their mass function
are a simple alternative to avoid the biases of single-mass models (which systematically
underestimate the total mass, half-mass radius, and central density), while more realistic multimass
DF-based models with freedom in the remnant content represent a promising avenue
to infer the total mass and the mass function of remnants.
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