47 research outputs found

    Evolution of Field Dwarf Galaxies with GEMS

    Full text link
    We present a study of the evolution of late-type field dwarfs over the last ~ 1.9 Gyr, based on HST ACS observations carried out as part of the GEMS survey. This study is amongst the first to probe the evolution of dwarfs over such a large timescale. The comparison of structural properties, particularly size and scale length, indicates that the dwarfs in the redshift range z ~ 0.01 to 0.15 (look-back times up to 1.9 Gyr) are more extended than local dwarfs. We argue that this difference is due to the star formation activity becoming more centrally concentrated in late-type dwarfs over the last ~ 1.9 Gyr. We discuss several possible causes for this evolution. We also find a lack of blue compact dwarfs in the GEMS sample and interpret this as indicative of the fact that strong, centrally concentrated star formation is a feature of evolved dwarfs that are entering their final stages of evolution.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the proceedings of IAUC198: Near-Field Cosmology with Dwarf Elliptical Galaxies, Helmut Jerjen and Bruno Binggeli, ed

    Constraints on Bars in the Local Universe from 5000 SDSS Galaxies

    Get PDF
    We present the first study of bars in the local Universe, based on the Sloan Digitized Sky Survey (SDSS). The large sample of ~5000 local galaxies provides the largest study to date of local bars and minimizes the effect of cosmic variance. The sample galaxies have M_g<=-18.5 mag and cover the redshift range 0.01<=z<0.04. We use a color cut in the color-magnitude diagram and the Sersic index n to identify disk galaxies. We characterize bars and disks using r-band images and the method of iterative ellipse fits and quantitative criteria developed in Jogee at al. (2004, ApJL, 615, L105). After excluding highly inclined (i>60 degrees) systems our results are: (1) the optical (r-band) fraction of barred galaxies among local disk galaxies is 43%, which confirms the ubiquity of local bars, in agreement with other optical studies based on smaller samples (e.g.Eskridge et al. 2000, AJ, 119, 536, Marinova & Jogee 2006, astro-ph/0608039); (2) the optical bar fraction rises for bluer galaxies, suggesting a relation between bars and star formation; (3) preliminary analyzes suggest that the optical bar fraction increases steeply with the galaxy effective radius; (4) the optical bar fraction at z~0 is ~35% for bright disks (M_g0.4), large-scale (bar semi-major axis >1.5 kpc) bars, which is comparable to the value of 30+/-6% reported earlier (Jogee et al. 2004) for similar disks and bars at z~0.2-1.0.Comment: 1 page, Proceedings of the IAU Symposium No. 235, 2006, "Galaxy Evolution across the Hubble Time", F. Combes & J. Palous, ed

    Bars in Disk-Dominated and Bulge-Dominated Galaxies at z~0: New Insights from ~3600 SDSS Galaxies

    Full text link
    We present a study of large-scale bars in the local Universe, based on a large sample of ~3692 galaxies, with -18.5 <= M_g < -22.0 mag and redshift 0.01 <= z < 0.03, drawn from the Sloan Digitized Sky Survey. Our sample includes many galaxies that are disk-dominated and of late Hubble types. Both color cuts and S\'ersic cuts yield a similar sample of ~2000 disk galaxies. We characterize bars and disks by ellipse-fitting r-band images and applying quantitative criteria. After excluding highly inclined (>60∘>60^{\circ}) systems, we find the following results. (1) The optical r-band fraction (f_opt-r) of barred galaxies, when averaged over the whole sample, is ~48%-52%. (2) When galaxies are separated according to half light radius (r_e), or normalized r_e/R_24, which is a measure of the bulge-to-disk (B/D) ratio, a remarkable result is seen: f_opt-r rises sharply, from ~40% in galaxies that have small r_e/R_24 and visually appear to host prominent bulges, to ~70% for galaxies that have large r_e/R_24 and appear disk-dominated. (3) fopt−rf_{\rm opt-r} rises for galaxies with bluer colors (by ~30%) and lower masses (by ~15%-20%). (4) While hierarchical Λ\LambdaCDM models of galaxy evolution models fail to produce galaxies without classical bulges, our study finds that ~20% of disk galaxies appear to be ``quasi-bulgeless''. (5) After applying the same cutoffs in magnitude (M_V= 1.5 kpc), and bar ellipticity (e_bar >=~0.4) that studies out to z~1 apply to ensure a complete sample, adequate spatial resolution, and reliable bar identification, we obtain an optical r-band bar fraction of 34%. This is comparable to the value reported at z~0.2-1.0, implying that the optical bar fraction does not decline dramatically by an order of magnitude in bright galaxies out to z~1. (abridged)Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, 50 pages, 20 figure

    VLT surface photometry and isophotal analysis of early-type dwarf galaxies in the Virgo cluster

    Full text link
    We have carried out surface photometry and an isophotal analysis for a sample of 25 early-type dwarf (dE and dS0) galaxies in the Virgo cluster based on CCD images taken at the VLT with FORS1 and FORS2. For each galaxy we present BB and RR-band surface brightness profiles, as well as the radial colour (B−RB-R) profile. We give total apparent BRBR magnitudes, effective radii, effective surface brightnesses and total colour indices. The light profiles have been fitted with S\'ersic models and the corresponding parameters are compared to the ones for other classes of objects. The observed profiles of the brightest cluster dwarfs show significant deviations from a simple S\'ersic model, indicating that there is more inner structure than just a nucleus. In addition, we find a relation between the effective surface brightness, at a given luminosity, and the strength of the offset of the galaxy's nucleus with respect to the center of the isophotes. Dwarfs with large nuclear offsets also tend to have stronger isophotal twists. In sum, our findings suggest the presence of substructure in most, and preferentially in the less compact, bright early-type dwarfs. The physical (dynamical) meaning of this has yet to be explored. (abridged)Comment: 29 pages, accepted for publication in A&

    A new automatic method to identify galaxy mergers - I. Description and application to the Space Telescope A901/902 Galaxy Evolution Survey

    Get PDF
    We present a new automatic method to identify galaxy mergers using the morphological information contained in the residual images of galaxies after the subtraction of a smooth SĂ©rsic model. The removal of the bulk signal from the host galaxy light is done with the aim of detecting the much fainter and elusive minor mergers. The specific morphological parameters that are used in the merger diagnostic suggested here are the residual flux fraction (RFF) and the asymmetry of the residuals [A(Res)]. The new diagnostic has been calibrated and optimized so that the resulting merger sample is very complete. However, the contamination by non-mergers is also high. If the same optimization method is adopted for combinations of other structural parameters such as the Concentration, Asymmetry, clumpineSs (CAS) system, the merger indicator we introduce yields merger samples of equal or higher statistical quality than the samples obtained through the use of other structural parameters. We investigate the ability of the method presented here to select minor mergers by identifying a sample of visually classified mergers that would not have been picked up by the use of the CAS system, when using its usual limits. However, given the low prevalence of mergers among the general population of galaxies and the optimization used here, we find that the merger diagnostic introduced in this work is best used as a negative merger test, that is, it is very effective at selecting non-merging galaxies. In common with all the currently available automatic methods, the sample of merger candidates selected is heavily contaminated by non-mergers, and further steps are needed to produce a clean merger sample. This merger diagnostic has been developed using the Hubble Space Telescope/ACS F606W images of the A901/902 multiple cluster system (z= 0.165) obtained by the Space Telescope A901/902 Galaxy Evolution Survey team. In particular, we have focused on a mass- and magnitude-limited sample (log M/M⊙ > 9.0, RVega, Total≀ 23.5 mag) which includes 905 cluster galaxies and 655 field galaxies of all morphological type
    corecore