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Peak metallicities of metal-rich(MR) populations of GCs belonging to spheroids of different mass fall within the somewhat conservative -0.7<=[Fe/H]<=-0.3 range. Indeed, if possible age effects are taken into account,this metallicity range might become smaller. Irregulars, like the LMC, with longer timescales of their formation and lower star formation (SF) efficiency do not contain the old MRGCs with [Fe/H]>-1.0,but they are observed to form populations of young/ intermediate-age massive star clusters (MSCs) with masses exceeding 10^4 Msol. Their formation is widely believed to be accidental process fully depending on external factors. From analysis of data available on the populations and their hosts, including populous star clusters in the LMC, we find that their most probable mean metallicities fall within -0.7<=[Fe/H]<=-0.3, as the peak metallicities of MRGCs do, irrespective of sings of interaction. Moreover, both the disk giant metallicity distribution function (MDF) in the LMC and the MDFs for old giants in the halos of massive spheroids exhibit significant increasing toward [Fe/H]~-0.5. That is in agreement with a correlation found between SF activity in galaxies and their metallicity. The formation of both the old MRGCs in spheroids and MSC populations in irregulars probably occurs approximately at the same stage of the host galaxies chemical evolution and is related to the essentially increased SF activity in the hosts around the same metallicity that is achieved very soon in massive spheroids, later in lower-mass spheroids, and much more later in irregulars. (Abridged)
We address the problem of the factors contributing to a peak color trend of old metal-rich globular cluster (MRGC) populations with mass of their hosts, early-type galaxies and spheroidal subsystems of spiral ones (spheroids). The color-mass trend is
We present new spectroscopic observations of Mkn 309, a starburst galaxy with one of the largest WR populations known. A highly super solar metallicity is derived. Using additional objects we analyse a sample of five metal-rich WR galaxies with the m
The formation of populous secondary star cluster systems is a widespread phenomenon in mergers of gas-rich galaxies. Many, if not most, of those clusters are massive and compact enough to be young globular clusters (GCs). GC systems in most E/S0 gala
The most massive star clusters include several generations of stars with a different chemical composition (mainly revealed by an Na-O anti-correlation) while low-mass star clusters appear to be chemically homogeneous. We are investigating the chemica
NGC 6791 is a unique stellar cluster, key to our understanding of both the multiple stellar population phenomenon and the evolution and assembly of the Galaxy. However, despite many investigations, its nature is still very controversial. Geisler et a