1,505 research outputs found
Constraining the ages of the fireballs in the wake of the dIrr galaxy VCC1217 / IC3418
A complex of Halpha emitting blobs with strong FUV excess is associated to
the dIrr galaxy VCC1217 / IC3418 (Hester et al. 2010), and extends up to 17 Kpc
in the South-East direction. These outstanding features can be morphologically
divided into diffuse filaments and compact knots, where most of the star
formation activity traced by Halpha takes place. We investigate the properties
of the galaxy and the blobs using a multiwavelength approach in order to
constrain their origin. We collect publicly available data in UV and Halpha and
observe the scene in the optical U,g,r,i bands with LBT. The photometric data
allows to evaluate the star formation rate and to perform a SED fitting
separately of the galaxy and the blobs in order to constrain their stellar
population age. Moreover we analyze the color and luminosity profile of the
galaxy and its spectrum to investigate its recent interaction with the Virgo
cluster. Our analysis confirms that the most plausible mechanism for the
formation of the blobs is ram pressure stripping by the Virgo cluster IGM. The
galaxy colors, luminosity profile and SED are consistent with a sudden gas
depletion in the last few hundred Myr. The SED fitting of the blobs constrains
their ages in < 400 Myr.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Radio continuum spectra of galaxies in the Virgo cluster region
New radio continuum observations of galaxies in the Virgo cluster region at
4.85, 8.6, and 10.55 GHz are presented. These observations are combined with
existing measurements at 1.4 and 0.325 GHz. The sample includes 81 galaxies
were spectra with more than two frequencies could be derived. Galaxies that
show a radio-FIR excess exhibit central activity (HII, LINER, AGN). The four
Virgo galaxies with the highest absolute radio excess are found within 2
degrees of the center of the cluster. Galaxies showing flat radio spectra also
host active centers. There is no clear trend between the spectral index and the
galaxy's distance to the cluster center.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
The census of nuclear activity of late-type galaxies in the Virgo cluster
The first spectroscopic census of AGNs associated to late-type galaxies in
the Virgo cluster is carried on by observing 213 out of a complete set of 237
galaxies more massive than M_dyn>10^{8.5} solar masses. Among them, 77 are
classified as AGNs (including 21 transition objects, 47 LINERs and 9 Seyferts),
and comprize 32% of the late-type galaxies in Virgo. Due to spectroscopic
incompleteness at most 21 AGNs are missed in the survey, so that the fraction
would increase up to 41%. Using corollary Near-IR observations, that enable us
to estimate galaxies dynamical masses, it is found that AGNs are hosted
exclusively in massive galaxies, i.e. M_dyn\gsim 10^{10} solar masses. Their
frequency increases steeply with the dynamical mass from zero at
M_dyn\approx10^{9.5} solar masses to virtually 1 at M_dyn>10^{11.5} solar
masses. These frequencies are consistent with the ones of low luminosity AGNs
found in the general field by the SDSS. Massive galaxies that harbor AGNs
commonly show conspicuous r-band star-like nuclear enhancements. Conversely
they often, but not necessarily contain massive bulges. Few well known AGNs
(e.g. M61, M100, NGC4535) are found in massive Sc galaxies with little or no
bulge. The AGN fraction seems to be only marginally sensitive to galaxy
environment. We infer the black hole masses using the known scaling relations
of quiescent black holes. No black holes lighter than \msol are
found active in our sample.Comment: The paper contains 13 figures and 5 tables; accepted for publication
in MNRA
A radial mass profile analysis of the lensing cluster MS2137-23
We reanalyze the strong lens modeling of the cluster of galaxies MS2137-23
using a new data set obtained with the ESO VLT. We found the photometric
redshifts of the two main arc systems are both at z=1.6. After subtraction of
the central cD star light of the HST image we found that only one object lying
underneath has the expected properties of the fifth image associated to the
tangential arc. We improve the previous lens modelings of the central dark
matter distribution of the cluster, using an isothermal model with a core (IS)
and the NFW-like model with a cusp. Without the fifth image, the arc properties
together with the shear map profile are equally well fit by the and by an IS
and a sub-class of generalized-NFW mass profiles having inner slope power index
in the range 0.7<alpha<1.2. Adding new constrains provided by the fifth image
favors IS profiles that better predict the fifth image properties. A model
including cluster galaxy perturbations or the the stellar mass distribution
does not change our conclusions but imposes the M/L_I of the cD stellar
component is below 10 at a 99% confidence level.
Using our new detailed lensing model together with Chandra X-ray data and the
cD stellar component we finally discuss intrinsic properties of the
gravitational potential. Whereas X-ray and dark matter have a similar shape at
various radius, the cD stellar isophotes are twisted by 13 deg. The sub-
arc-second azimuthal shift we observe between the radial arc position and the
predictions of elliptical models correspond to what is expected from a mass
distribution twist. This shift may result from a projection effect of the cD
and the cluster halos, thus revealing the triaxiality of the system.Comment: Final version accepted in A&
Deepest Near-IR Surface Photometry of Galaxies in the Local Sphere of Influence
We present near-IR, deep (4 mag deeper than 2MASS) imaging of 56 Local Volume
galaxies. Global parameters such as total magnitudes and stellar masses have
been derived and the new near-IR data combined with existing 21cm and optical
B-band data. We present multiwavelength relations such as the HI mass-to-light
ratio and investigate the maximum total baryonic mass a galaxy can have.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, To be published in the proceedings of "Galaxies
in the Local Volume", ed. B. Koribalski, H. Jerje
UV properties of early-type galaxies in the Virgo cluster
We study the UV properties of a volume limited sample of early-type galaxies
in the Virgo cluster combining new GALEX far- (1530 A) and near-ultraviolet
(2310 A) data with spectro-photometric data available at other wavelengths. The
sample includes 264 ellipticals, lenticulars and dwarfs spanning a large range
in luminosity (M(B)<-15). While the NUV to optical or near-IR color magnitude
relations (CMR) are similar to those observed at optical wavelengths, with a
monotonic reddening of the color index with increasing luminosity, the (FUV-V)
and (FUV-H) CMRs show a discontinuity between massive and dwarf objects. An
even more pronounced dichotomy is observed in the (FUV-NUV) CMR. For
ellipticals the (FUV-NUV) color becomes bluer with increasing luminosity and
with increasing reddening of the optical or near-IR color indices. For the
dwarfs the opposite trend is observed. These observational evidences are
consistent with the idea that the UV emission is dominated by hot, evolved
stars in giant systems, while in dwarf ellipticals residual star formation
activity is more common.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal Letter
SARCS strong lensing galaxy groups: I - optical, weak lensing, and scaling laws
We present the weak lensing and optical analysis of the SL2S-ARCS (SARCS)
sample of strong lens candidates. The sample is based on the Strong Lensing
Legacy Survey (SL2S), a systematic search of strong lensing systems in the
photometric Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS). The SARCS
sample focuses on arc-like features and is designed to contain mostly galaxy
groups. We briefly present the weak lensing methodology that we use to estimate
the mass of the SARCS objects. Among 126 candidates, we obtain a weak lensing
detection for 89 objects with velocity dispersions of the Singular Isothermal
Sphere mass model ranging from 350 to 1000 km/s with an average value of
600km/s, corresponding to a rich galaxy group (or poor cluster). From the
galaxies belonging to the bright end of the group's red sequence (M_i<-21), we
derive the optical properties of the SARCS candidates. We obtain typical
richnesses of N=5-15 galaxies and optical luminosities of L=0.5-1.5e+12 Lsol
(within a radius of 0.5 Mpc). We use these galaxies to compute luminosity
density maps, from which a morphological classification reveals that a large
fraction of the sample are groups with a complex light distribution, either
elliptical or multimodal, suggesting that these objects are dynamically young
structures. We finally combine the lensing and optical analyses to draw a
sample of 80 most secure group candidates, i.e. weak lensing detection and
over-density at the lens position in the luminosity map, to remove false
detections and galaxy-scale systems from the initial sample. We use this
reduced sample to probe the optical scaling relations in combination with a
sample of massive galaxy clusters. We detect the expected correlations over the
probed range in mass with a typical scatter of 25% in the SIS velocity
dispersion at a given richness or luminosity, making these scaling laws
interesting mass proxie
The Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey V : The Virgo Cluster (I)
We present 21 cm observations of a 10 2 degree region in the Virgo
cluster, obtained as part of the Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey. 289 sources
are detected over the full redshift range (-2,000 + 20,000
km/s) with 95 belonging to the cluster ( 3,000 km/s). We combine
our observations with data from the optically selected Virgo Cluster Catalogue
(VCC) and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Most of our detections can be
clearly associated with a unique optical counterpart, and 30% of the cluster
detections are new objects fainter than the VCC optical completeness limit. 7
detections may have no optical counterpart and we discuss the possible origins
of these objects. 7 detections appear associated with early-type galaxies. We
perform HI stacking on the HI-undetected galaxies listed in the VCC in this
region and show that they must have significantly less gas than those actually
detected in HI. Galaxies undetected in HI in the cluster appear to be really
devoid of gas, in contrast to a sample of field galaxies from ALFALFA.Comment: 23 pages, 22 figures, 4 table
The Sloan Lens ACS Survey. VIII. The relation between environment and internal structure of early-type galaxies
We study the relation between the internal structure of early-type galaxies
and their environment using 70 strong gravitational lenses from the Sloan ACS
Lens Survey. The Sloan database is used to determine two measures of
overdensity of galaxies around each lens: the projected number density of
galaxies inside the tenth nearest neighbor (\Sigma_{10}) and within a cone of
radius one h^{-1} Mpc (D_1). Our main results are: 1) The average overdensity
is somewhat larger than unity, consistent with lenses preferring overdense
environments as expected for massive early-type galaxies (12/70 lenses are in
known groups/clusters). 2) The distribution of overdensities is
indistinguishable from that of "twin" non-lens galaxies selected from SDSS to
have the same redshift and stellar velocity dispersion \sigma_*. Thus, within
our errors, lens galaxies are an unbiased population, and the SLACS results can
be generalized to the overall population of early-type galaxies. 3) Typical
contributions from external mass distribution are no more than a few per cent,
reaching 10-20% (~0.05-0.10 external convergence) only in the most extreme
overdensities. 4) No significant correlation between overdensity and slope of
the mass density profile of the lens is found. 5) Satellite galaxies (those
with a more luminous companion) have marginally steeper mass density profiles
than central galaxies (those without). This result suggests that tidal
stripping may affect the mass structure of early-type galaxies down to kpc
scales probed by strong lensing, when they fall into larger structures
[ABRIDGED].Comment: ApJ, in press; minor changes with respect to v
Starbursts versus Truncated Star Formation in Nearby Clusters of Galaxies
We present long-slit spectroscopy, B and R bandpass imaging, and 21 cm
observations of a sample of early-type galaxies in nearby clusters which are
known to be either in a star-forming phase or to have had star formation which
recently terminated. From the long-slit spectra, obtained with the Blanco 4-m
telescope, we find that emission lines in the star-forming cluster galaxies are
significantly more centrally concentrated than in a sample of field galaxies.
The broadband imaging reveals that two currently star-forming early-type
galaxies in the Pegasus I cluster have blue nuclei, again indicating that
recent star formation has been concentrated. In contrast, the two galaxies for
which star formation has already ended show no central color gradient. The
Pegasus I galaxy with the most evident signs of ongoing star formation
(NGC7648), exhibits signatures of a tidal encounter. Neutral hydrogen
observations of that galaxy with the Arecibo radiotelescope reveal the presence
of ~4 x 10^8 solar masses of HI. Arecibo observations of other current or
recent star-forming early-type galaxies in Pegasus I indicate smaller amounts
of gas in one of them, and only upper limits in others.Comment: to be published in Astronomical Journa
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