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We analyze post-refurbishment Hubble Space Telescope images of four globular clusters in M31. The ability to resolve stars to below the horizontal branch permits us to use star counts to extend the surface brightness profiles determined using aperture photometry to almost 5 orders of magnitude below the central surface density. Three of the resulting cluster profiles are reasonably well-fit using single-mass King models, with core and tidal radii typical of those seen in Galactic globular clusters. We confirm an earlier report of the discovery of a cluster which has apparently undergone core collapse. Three of the four clusters show departures in their outskirts from King model behavior which, based on recent results for Galactic globulars, may indicate the presence of tidal tails.
In this paper, we present surface brightness profiles for 79 globular clusters in M31, using images observed with {it Hubble Space Telescope}, some of which are from new observations. The structural and dynamical parameters are derived from fitting t
We perform aperture photometry and profile fitting on 419 globular cluster (GC) candidates with mV leq 23 mag identified in Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys BVI imaging, and estimate the effective radii of the clusters. We identify
Mayall II = G1 is one of the most luminous globular clusters (GCs) known in M31. New deep, high-resolution observations with the Advanced Camera for Surveys on the {sl Hubble Space Telescope} are used to provide accurate photometric data to the small
With the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope, we have discovered in M4 (NGC 6121, C 1620-264) the first extensive sequence of cooling white dwarfs seen in a globular cluster. Adopting a distance modulus of (m-M)_V = 12
The giant elliptical galaxy M87 has been imaged over 30 consecutive days in 2001, 60 consecutive days in 2005-2006, and every 5 days over a 265 day span in 2016-2017 with the Hubble Space Telescope, leading to the detection of 137 classical novae thr