58 research outputs found
Virgo Early-Type Dwarfs in ALFALFA
Early-type dwarf galaxies dominate cluster populations, but their formation
and evolutionary histories are poorly understood. The ALFALFA (Arecibo Legacy
Fast ALFA) survey has completed observations of the Virgo Cluster in the
declination range of 6 - 16 degrees. Less than 2% of the early-type dwarf
population is detected, a significantly lower fraction than reported in
previous papers based on more limited samples. In contrast ~30 of the
irregular/BCD dwarf population is detected. The detected early-type galaxies
tend to be located in the outer regions of the cluster, with a concentration in
the direction of the M Cloud. Many show evidence for ongoing/recent star
formation. Galaxies such as these may be undergoing morphological transition
due to cluster environmental effects.Comment: 2 pages. To be published in proceedings of IAU Symposium 244: 'Dark
Galaxies and Lost Baryons', J. I. Davies & M. D. Disney. eds., Cambridge
University Pres
The Trouble with Hubble Types in the Virgo Cluster
Quantitative measures of central light concentration and star formation
activity are derived from R and Halpha surface photometry of 84 bright S0-Scd
Virgo Cluster and isolated spiral galaxies. For isolated spirals, there is a
good correlation between these two parameters and assigned Hubble types. In the
Virgo Cluster, the correlation between central light concentration and star
formation activity is significantly weaker. Virgo Cluster spirals have
systematically reduced global star formation with respect to isolated spirals,
with severe reduction in the outer disk, but normal or enhanced activity in the
inner disk. Assigned Hubble types are thus inadequate to describe the range in
morphologies of bright Virgo Cluster spirals. In particular, spirals with
reduced global star formation activity are often assigned misleading early-type
classifications, irrespective of their central light concentrations. 45+-25% of
the galaxies classified as Sa in the Virgo Cluster sample have central light
concentrations more characteristic of isolated Sb-Sc galaxies. The misleading
classification of low concentration galaxies with low star formation rates as
early-type spirals may account for part of the excess of `early-type' spiral
galaxies in clusters. Thus the morphology-density relationship is not all due
to a systematic increase in the bulge-to-disk ratio with environmental density.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. Latex aaspp4.sty, 9 pages, 2
Postscript (embedded) figures. Also available at
http://www.astro.yale.edu/koopmann/preprint.htm
An Atlas of H-alpha and R Images and Radial Profiles of 29 Bright Isolated Spiral Galaxies
Narrow-band H-alpha+[NII] and broadband R images and surface photometry are
presented for a sample of 29 bright (M_B < -18) isolated S0-Scd galaxies within
a distance of 48 Mpc. These galaxies are among the most isolated nearby spiral
galaxies of their Hubble classifications as determined from the Nearby Galaxies
Catalog (Tully 1987a).Comment: To appear in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 17 pages,
including 8 atlas pages in JPEG format. Version with high resolution figures
available at http://www1.union.edu/~koopmanr/preprints.htm
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