553 research outputs found

    Disks in Early-Type Dwarf Galaxies

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    We identify disk features (spiral arms, bars, or edge-on disks) in a significant fraction of Virgo cluster early-type dwarfs. These galaxies are disk-shaped and are an unrelaxed cluster population that possibly formed out of infalling progenitors. Some display spiral arms with grand design features that cannot be the mere remainders of potential late-type spiral progenitor

    First Results for the Solar Neighborhood of the Asiago Red Clump Survey

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    The Asiago Red Clump Spectroscopic Survey (ARCS) is an ongoing survey that provides atmospheric parameters, distances and space velocities of a well selected sample of Red Clump stars distributed along the celestial equator. We used the ARCS catalog for a preliminary investigation of the Galactic disk in the Solar Neighborhood, in particular we focused on detection and characterization of moving groups.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of "Assembling the Puzzle of the Milky Way", Le Grand Bornand (April 17-22, 2011), C. Reyle, A. Robin, M. Schultheis (eds.

    Are dwarf spheroidal galaxies dark matter dominated or remnants of disrupted larger satellite galaxies? -- A possible test

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    The failure of standard cosmolocical models in accounting for the statistics of dwarf satellites and the rotation curve of gas-rich dwarf galaxies in detail has led us to examine whether earlier non-equilibrium models of dwarf spheroidal satellites without any dark matter should be reconsidered in more detail. Such models can explain the high dispersion of the dwarf spheroids by the projection of disrupted tidal debris. We show in the case of Milky Way satellites, that these models predict a significant spread in the apparent magnitude of horizontal branch stars which is correlated with sky position and velocity. In particular, the models produce a strong correlation of radial velocity with the long axis of the dwarf. Current data do not set strong enough constraints on the models, but we suggest that photometric and spectroscopic surveys of extra-tidal stars of nearby dwarf spheroids in the Milky Way and Andromeda can falsify these models without dark matter.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Kinematically Cold Populations at Large Radii in the Draco and Ursa Minor Dwarf Spheroidals

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    We present projected velocity dispersion profiles for the Draco and Ursa Minor (UMi) dwarf spheroidal galaxies based on 207 and 162 discrete stellar velocities, respectively. Both profiles show a sharp decline in the velocity dispersion outside ~30 arcmin (Draco) and ~40 arcmin (UMi). New, deep photometry of Draco reveals a break in the light profile at ~25 arcmin. These data imply the existence of a kinematically cold population in the outer parts of both galaxies. Possible explanations of both the photometric and kinematic data in terms of both equilibrium and non-equilibrium models are discussed in detail. We conclude that these data challenge the picture of dSphs as simple, isolated stellar systems.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter

    The Anisotropic Distribution of M 31 Satellite Galaxies: A Polar Great Plane of Early-Type Companions

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    The highly anisotropic distribution and apparent alignment of the Galactic satellites in polar great planes begs the question how common such distributions are. The satellite system of M31 is the only nearby system for which we currently have sufficiently accurate distances to study the three-dimensional satellite distribution. We present the spatial distribution of the 15 presently known M31 companions in a coordinate system centered on M31 and aligned with its disk. Through a detailed statistical analysis we show that the full satellite sample describes a plane that is inclined by -56 deg with respect to the poles of M31 and that has an r.m.s. height of 100 kpc. With 88% the statistical significance of this plane is low and it is unlikely to have a physical meaning. The great stellar stream found near Andromeda is inclined to this plane by 7 deg. There is little evidence for a Holmberg effect. If we confine our analysis to early-type dwarfs, we find a best-fit polar plane within 5 deg to 7 deg from the pole of M31. This polar great plane has a statistical significance of 99.3% and includes all dSphs (except for And II), M32, NGC 147, and PegDIG. The r.m.s. distance of these galaxies from the polar plane is 16 kpc. The nearby spiral M33 has a distance of only about 3 kpc from this plane, which points toward the M81 group. We discuss the anisotropic distribution of M31's early-type companions in the framework of three scenarios, namely as remnants of the break-up of a larger progenitor, as tracer of a prolate dark matter halo, and as tracer of collapse along large-scale filaments. (Abridged)Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa

    Chemical Evolution in the Carina Dwarf Spheroidal

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    We present metallicities for 487 red giants in the Carina dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy that were obtained from FLAMES low-resolution Ca triplet (CaT) spectroscopy. We find a mean [Fe/H] of -1.91 dex with an intrinsic dispersion of 0.25 dex, whereas the full spread in metallicities is at least one dex. The analysis of the radial distribution of metallicities reveals that an excess of metal poor stars resides in a region of larger axis distances. These results can constrain evolutionary models and are discussed in the context of chemical evolution in the Carina dSph.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the ESO/Arcetri-workshop on "Chemical Abundances and Mixing in Stars", 13.-17. Sep. 2004, Castiglione della Pescaia, Italy, L. Pasquini, S. Randich (eds.

    The Color-Magnitude Relation in Coma: Clues to the Age and Metallicity of Cluster Populations

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    We have observed three fields of the Coma cluster of galaxies with a narrow band (modified Stromgren) filter system. Observed galaxies include 31 in the vicinity of NGC 4889, 48 near NGC 4874, and 60 near NGC 4839 complete to M_5500=-18 in all three subclusters. Spectrophotometric classification finds all three subclusters of Coma to be dominated by red, E type (ellipticals/S0's) galaxies with a mean blue fraction, f_B, of 0.10. The blue fraction increases to fainter luminosities, possible remnants of dwarf starburst population or the effects of dynamical friction removing bright, blue galaxies from the cluster population by mergers. We find the color-magnitude (CM) relation to be well defined and linear over the range of M_5500=-13 to -22. After calibration to multi-metallicity models, bright ellipticals are found to have luminosity weighted mean [Fe/H] values between -0.5 and +0.5, whereas low luminosity ellipticals have [Fe/H] values ranging from -2 to solar. The lack of CM relation in our continuum color suggests that a systematic age effect cancels the metallicity effects in this bandpass. This is confirmed with our age index which finds a weak correlation between luminosity and mean stellar age in ellipticals such that the stellar populations of bright ellipticals are 2 to 3 Gyrs younger than low luminosity ellipticals.Comment: 26 pages AAS LaTeX, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A

    The Last Stages of Star Formation in dEs?

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    A significant fraction of Virgo cluster early-type dwarf galaxies have blue central colours caused by recent or ongoing star formation. A spectral analysis shows that even in their centers, stellar mass is dominated by an old population. These galaxies are an unrelaxed cluster population that possibly formed from morphological transformation of late-type galaxie

    Further Evidence for a Merger Origin for the Thick Disk: Galactic Stars Along Lines-of-sight to Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies

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    The history of the Milky Way Galaxy is written in the properties of its stellar populations. Here we analyse stars observed as part of surveys of local dwarf spheroidal galaxies, but which from their kinematics are highly probable to be non-members. The selection function -- designed to target metal-poor giants in the dwarf galaxies, at distances of ~100kpc -- includes F-M dwarfs in the Milky Way, at distances of up to several kpc. Thestars whose motions are analysed here lie in the cardinal directions of Galactic longitude l ~ 270 and l ~ 90, where the radial velocity is sensitive to the orbital rotational velocity. We demonstrate that the faint F/G stars contain a significant population with V_phi ~ 100km/s, similar to that found by a targeted, but limited in areal coverage, survey of thick-disk/halo stars by Gilmore, Wyse & Norris (2002). This value of mean orbital rotation does not match either the canonical thick disk or the stellar halo. We argue that this population, detected at both l ~ 270 and l ~ 90, has the expected properties of `satellite debris' in the thick-disk/halo interface, which we interpret as remnants of the merger that heated a pre-existing thin disk to form the thick disk.Comment: Accepted, Astrophysical Journal Letter

    The many faces of early-type dwarf galaxies

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    We present a study of 413 early-type dwarf (dE) galaxies in the Virgo Cluster with SDSS multicolour imaging. Several dE subclasses show systematic differences in shape, clustering properties, and stellar content. We find different colour-magnitude relations for nucleated and non-nucleated dEs, as well as for dE samples populating regions of different densitie
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