846 research outputs found
On the unification of dwarf and giant elliptical galaxies
The near orthogonal distributions of dwarf elliptical (dE) and giant
elliptical (E) galaxies in the mu_e-Mag and mu_e-log(R_e) diagrams have been
interpreted as evidence for two distinct galaxy formation processes. However,
continuous, linear relationships across the alleged dE/E boundary at M_B = -18
mag - such as those between central surface brightness (mu_0) and (i) galaxy
magnitude and (ii) light-profile shape (n) - suggest a similar, governing
formation mechanism. Here we explain how these latter two linear trends
necessitate a different behavior for dE and E galaxies, exactly as observed, in
diagrams involving mu_e (and also _e). A natural consequence is that the
distribution of dEs and Es in Fundamental Plane type analyses that use the
associated intensity I_e, or _e, are expected to appear different. Together
with other linear trends across the alleged dE/E boundary, such as those
between luminosity and color, metallicity, and velocity dispersion, it appears
that the dEs form a continuous extension to the E galaxies. The presence of
partially depleted cores in luminous (M_B < -20.5 mag) Es does however signify
the action of a different physical process at the centers (< ~300 pc) of these
galaxies.Comment: 5 pages from the proceedings of the 2004 conference "Penetrating bars
through masks of cosmic dust: the Hubble tuning fork strikes a new note".
Edited by D. L. Block, I. Puerari, K. C. Freeman, R. Groess, and E. K. Bloc
Evolution of central dark matter of early-type galaxies up to z ~ 0.8
We investigate the evolution of dark and luminous matter in the central
regions of early-type galaxies (ETGs) up to z ~ 0.8. We use a spectroscopically
selected sample of 154 cluster and field galaxies from the EDisCS survey,
covering a wide range in redshifts (z ~ 0.4-0.8), stellar masses ( ~ 10.5-11.5 dex) and velocity dispersions
( ~ 100-300 \, km/s). We obtain central dark matter (DM)
fractions by determining the dynamical masses from Jeans modelling of galaxy
aperture velocity dispersions and the from galaxy colours, and
compare the results with local samples. We discuss how the correlations of
central DM with galaxy size (i.e. the effective radius, ),
and evolve as a function of redshift, finding
clear indications that local galaxies are, on average, more DM dominated than
their counterparts at larger redshift. This DM fraction evolution with can
be only partially interpreted as a consequence of the size-redshift evolution.
We discuss our results within galaxy formation scenarios, and conclude that the
growth in size and DM content which we measure within the last 7 Gyr is
incompatible with passive evolution, while it is well reproduced in the
multiple minor merger scenario. We also discuss the impact of the IMF on our DM
inferences and argue that this can be non-universal with the lookback time. In
particular, we find the Salpeter IMF can be better accommodated by low redshift
systems, while producing stellar masses at high- which are unphysically
larger than the estimated dynamical masses (particularly for
lower- systems).Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, MNRAS in pres
Detection of Surface Brightness Fluctuations in Elliptical Galaxies imaged with the Advanced Camera for Surveys. B- and I-band measurements
Taking advantage of the exceptional capabilities of ACS on board of HST, we
derive Surface Brightness Fluctuation (SBF) measurements in the B and I bands
from images of six elliptical galaxies with . Given the
low S/N ratio of the SBF signal in the blue band images, the reliability of the
measurements is verified both with numerical simulations and experimental data
tests.
This paper presents the first published B- and I-band SBF measurements for
distant ( 20 Mpc) galaxies, essential for the comparisons of the models
to observations of normal ellipticals. By comparing I-band data with our new
Simple Stellar Population (SSP) models we find an excellent agreement and we
confirm that I-band SBF magnitudes are mainly sensitive to the metallicity of
the dominant stellar component in the galaxy, and are not strongly affected by
the contribution of possible secondary stellar components. As a consequence
I-band fluctuations magnitudes are ideal for distance studies. On the other
hand, we show that standard SSP models do not reproduce the B-band SBF
magnitudes of red ((B-I)_0 \gsim 2.1) galaxies in our sample. We explore the
capability of two non--canonical models in properly reproducing the high
sensitivity of B SBF to the presence of even small fractions of bright, hot
stars (metal poor stars, hot evolved stars, etc.). The disagreement is solved
both by taking into account hot (Post--AGB) stars in SSP models and/or by
adopting Composite Stellar Population models. Finally, we suggest a limit value
of the S/N for the B-band SBF signal required to carry out a detailed study of
stellar population properties based on this technique.Comment: ApJ accepte
VEGAS: a VST Early-type GAlaxy Survey. IV. NGC 1533, IC 2038 and IC 2039: an interacting triplet in the Dorado group
This paper focuses on NGC 1533 and the pair IC 2038 and IC 2039 in Dorado a
nearby, clumpy, still un-virialized group. We obtained their surface photometry
from deep OmegaCAM@ESO-VST images in g and r bands. For NGC 1533, we map the
surface brightness down to mag/arcsec and mag/arcsec and out to about . At such faint levels
the structure of NGC 1533 appear amazingly disturbed with clear structural
asymmetry between inner and outer isophotes in the North-East direction. We
detect new spiral arm-like tails in the outskirts, which might likely be the
signature of a past interaction/merging event. Similarly, IC 2038 and IC 2039
show tails and distortions indicative of their ongoing interaction. Taking
advantages of deep images, we are able to detect the optical counterpart to the
HI gas. The analysis of the new deep data suggests that NGC 1533 had a complex
history made of several interactions with low-mass satellites that generated
the star-forming spiral-like structure in the inner regions and are shaping the
stellar envelope. In addition, the VST observations show that also the two less
luminous galaxies, IC 2038 and IC 2039, are probably interacting each-other
and, in the past, IC 2038 could have also interacted with NGC 1533, which
stripped away gas and stars from its outskirts. The new picture emerging from
this study is of an interacting triplet, where the brightest galaxy NGC 1533
has ongoing mass assembly in the outskirts.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal. High-resolution
version of paper is available at the following link:
https://www.dropbox.com/preview/VEGAS_IV.pdf?role=persona
Gauging the dark matter fraction in a S0 galaxy at z=0.47 through gravitational lensing from deep HST/ACS imaging
We analyze a new gravitational lens, OAC-GL J1223-1239, serendipitously found
in a deep I-band image of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for
Surveys (ACS). The lens is a L_*, edge-on S0 galaxy at z=0.4656. The
gravitational arc has a radius of 0.42 arcsec. We have determined the total
mass and the dark matter (DM) fraction within the Einstein radius as a function
of the lensed source redshift, which is presently unknown. For z ~ 1.3, which
is in the middle of the redshift range plausible for the source according to
some external constraints, we find the central velocity dispersion to be ~180
km/s. With this value, close to that obtained by means of the Faber-Jackson
relation at the lens redshift, we compute a 30% DM fraction within the Einstein
radius (given the uncertainty in the source redshift, the allowed range for the
DM fraction is 25-35 % in our lensing model). When compared with the galaxies
in the local Universe, the lensing galaxy, OAC-GL J1223-1239 seems to fall in
the transition regime between massive DM dominated galaxies and lower-mass, DM
deficient systems.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Ap
OmegaWINGS: OmegaCAM@VST observations of WINGS galaxy clusters
The Wide-field Nearby Galaxy-cluster Survey (WINGS) is a wide-field
multi-wavelength survey of X-ray selected clusters at z =0.04-0.07. The
original 34'x34' WINGS field-of- view has now been extended to cover a 1 sq.deg
field with both photometry and spectroscopy. In this paper we present the
Johnson B and V-band OmegaCAM/VST observations of 46 WINGS clusters, together
with the data reduction, data quality and Sextractor photometric catalogs.
With a median seeing of 1arcs in both bands, our 25-minutes exposures in each
band typically reach the 50% completeness level at V=23.1 mag. The quality of
the astrometric and photometric accuracy has been verified by comparison with
the 2MASS as well as with SDSS astrometry, and SDSS and previous WINGS imaging.
Star/galaxy separation and sky-subtraction procedure have been tested comparing
with previous WINGS data.
The Sextractor photometric catalogues are publicly available at the CDS, and
will be included in the next release of the WINGS database on the VO together
with the OmegaCAM reduced images. These data form the basis for a large ongoing
spectroscopic campaign with AAOmega/AAT and is being employed for a variety of
studies. [abridged]Comment: submitted to A&
Shapley Supercluster Survey (ShaSS): Galaxy Evolution from Filaments to Cluster Cores
We present an overview of a multi-wavelength survey of the Shapley
supercluster (SSC; z~0.05) covering a contiguous area of 260 h^-2_70 Mpc^2
including the supercluster core. The project main aim is to quantify the
influence of cluster-scale mass assembly on galaxy evolution in one of the most
massive structures in the local Universe. The Shapley supercluster survey
(ShaSS) includes nine Abell clusters (A3552, A3554, A3556, A3558, A3559, A3560,
A3562, AS0724, AS0726) and two poor clusters (SC1327- 312, SC1329-313) showing
evidence of cluster-cluster interactions. Optical (ugri) and near-infrared (K)
imaging acquired with VST and VISTA allow us to study the galaxy population
down to m*+6 at the supercluster redshift. A dedicated spectroscopic survey
with AAOmega on the Anglo-Australian Telescope provides a magnitude-limited
sample of supercluster members with 80% completeness at ~m*+3.
We derive the galaxy density across the whole area, demonstrating that all
structures within this area are embedded in a single network of clusters,
groups and filaments. The stellar mass density in the core of the SSC is always
higher than 9E09 M_sun Mpc^-3, which is ~40x the cosmic stellar mass density
for galaxies in the local Universe. We find a new filamentary structure (~7 Mpc
long in projection) connecting the SSC core to the cluster A3559, as well as
previously unidentified density peaks. We perform a weak-lensing analysis of
the central 1 sqdeg field of the survey obtaining for the central cluster A3558
a mass of M_500=7.63E14 M_sun, in agreement with X-ray based estimates.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication on MNRA
Intracluster stellar population properties from N-body cosmological simulations -- I. Constraints at
We use a high resolution collisionless simulation of a Virgo--like cluster in
a CDM cosmology to determine the velocity and clustering properties of
the diffuse stellar component in the intracluster region at the present epoch.
The simulated cluster builds up hierarchically and tidal interactions between
member galaxies and the cluster potential produce a diffuse stellar component
free-flying in the intracluster medium. Here we adopt an empirical scheme to
identify tracers of the stellar component in the simulation and hence study its
properties. We find that at the intracluster stellar light is mostly
unrelaxed in velocity space and clustered in structures whose typical
clustering radii are about 50 kpc at R=400--500 kpc from the cluster center,
and predict the radial velocity distribution expected in spectroscopic
follow-up surveys. Finally, we compare the spatial clustering in the simulation
with the properties of the Virgo intracluster stellar population, as traced by
ongoing intracluster planetary nebulae surveys in Virgo. The preliminary
results indicate a substantial agreement with the observed clustering
properties of the diffuse stellar population in Virgo.Comment: 39 pages, 10 figures, 8 tables, in press on ApJ. Bad image quality
for some figures because resizing is neede
Surface Brightness Fluctuations from archival ACS images: a stellar population and distance study
We derive Surface Brightness Fluctuations (SBF) and integrated magnitudes in
the V- and I-bands using Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) archival data. The
sample includes 14 galaxies covering a wide range of physical properties:
morphology, total absolute magnitude, integrated color. We take advantage of
the latter characteristic of the sample to check existing empirical
calibrations of absolute SBF magnitudes both in the I- and V-passbands.
Additionally, by comparing our SBF and color data with the Teramo-SPoT simple
stellar population models, and other recent sets of population synthesis
models, we discuss the feasibility of stellar population studies based on
fluctuation magnitudes analysis. The main result of this study is that
multiband optical SBF data and integrated colors can be used to significantly
constrain the chemical composition of the dominant stellar system in the
galaxy, but not the age in the case of systems older than 3 Gyr.
SBF color gradients are also detected and analyzed. These SBF gradient data,
together with other available data, point to the existence of mass dependent
metallicity gradients in galaxies, with the more massive objects showing a
non--negligible SBF versus color gradient. The comparison with models suggests
that such gradients imply more metal rich stellar populations in the galaxies'
inner regions with respect to the outer ones.Comment: ApJ Accepte
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