BOOKREVIEWS N° R1018
Published in 2008
by CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Address : The Edinburgh
Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK
Telephone : 01223
312393
Fax : 01223 315052
Internet : www.cambridge.org
ISBN : 978-0-521-87467-0 - 480 pages –
hardback
Globular Clusters provide a unique
method for tracing the formation and evolution of their host galaxies. As
single stellar populations they are far easier to interpret than the
multi-population complexity of galaxy field stars. The scaling properties of
globular clusters provide important constraints on the hierarchical assembly
history of galaxies. Here we briefly review recent progress using the Hubble
Space Telescope for imaging and the Keck plus Gemini telescopes for
spectroscopy. We argue that the red, or metal-rich, subpopulation of GCs is
associated with the bulge/spheroid component of galaxies. As one of the oldest
stellar systems available for study, we discuss how globular clusters can be
used to constrain the formation of galaxy bulges, in particular the role of
mergers vs secular evolution. We conclude that metal-rich GCs, and hence
bulges, formed very early in the Universe with more recent mergers having a
small effect at most.

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