205 research outputs found
Line-strength indices and velocity dispersions for 148 early-type galaxies in different environments
We have derived high quality line-strength indices and velocity
dispersions for a sample of 148 early-type galaxies in different
environments. The wavelength region covered by the observations
( to 6600 Å) includes the Lick/IDS indices
H, Mg1, Mg2, Mgb, Fe5015, Fe5270, Fe5335, Fe5406,
Fe5709, Fe5782, NaD, TiO1 and TiO2. The data are intended to
address possible differences of the stellar populations of early-type
galaxies in low- and high-density environments. This paper describes
the sample properties, explains the data reduction and presents the
complete list of all the measurements. Most galaxies of the sample
(85%) had no previous measurements of any Lick/IDS indices and for
30% of the galaxies we present first-time determinations of their
velocity dispersions. Special care is taken to identify galaxies with
emission lines. We found that 62 per cent of the galaxies in the
sample have emission lines, as measured by the equivalent width of the
[OIII] 5007Å line, EW[OIII] > 0.3 Å
The impact of alpha/Fe enhanced stellar evolutionary tracks on the ages of elliptical galaxies
We complement our study of alpha/Fe enhanced stellar population models of
Lick absorption indices (Thomas et al. 2003) by comparing two sets of alpha/Fe
enhanced models. In both models the impact on Lick indices due to alpha/Fe
enhancement is accounted for through a modification of the stellar absorption
line-strengths using the response functions of Tripicco & Bell (1995). One set
of models, however, uses solar-scaled, the other alpha/Fe enhanced stellar
evolutionary tracks. Since the alpha/Fe enhanced tracks are hotter than the
solar-scaled ones (Salasnich et al. 2000), the correspondent stellar population
models have slightly weaker metallic indices (i.e. Mgb, etc.) and stronger
Balmer line indices (Hbeta) (Maraston et al 2003). Here we explore
quantitatively the impact of this effect on the alpha/Fe ratios, metallicities
and ages that are derived for elliptical galaxies. We find that the modest
decrease of the metallic indices Mgb and balance each other, such that
fully consistent alpha/Fe ratios are derived for stellar systems using alpha/Fe
enhanced models with either solar-scaled or alpha/Fe enhanced stellar tracks.
The decrease of the metallic indices and the increase of Hbeta conspire in a
way that also consistent metallicities are obtained. The derived ages, instead,
are significantly different. The inclusion of alpha/Fe enhanced stellar tracks
leads to the derivation of ages as high as 30 Gyr for elliptical galaxies. For
the same objects, ages not older than 15 Gyr are obtained, if alpha/Fe enhanced
models using solar-scaled tracks are adopted. This may indicate that current
stellar evolutionary models overestimate the bluing of stellar evolutionary
tracks due to alpha/Fe enhanced chemical mixtures at super-solar metallicities.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by A&
A new catalogue of ISM content of normal galaxies
We have compiled a catalogue of the gas content for a sample of 1916
galaxies, considered to be a fair representation of `normality'. The definition
of 'normal' galaxy adopted in this work implies that we have purposely excluded
from the catalogue galaxies having distorted morphology (such as interaction
bridges, tails or lopsidedness) and/or any signature of peculiar kinematics
(such as polar rings, counterrotating disks or other decoupled components). In
contrast, we have included systems hosting active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the
catalogue. This catalogue revises previous compendia on the ISM content of
galaxies, and compiles data available in the literature from several small
samples of galaxies. Masses for warm dust, atomic and molecular gas, as well as
X-ray luminosities have been converted to a uniform distance scale taken from
the Catalogue of Principal Galaxies (PGC). We have used two different
normalization factors to explore the variation of the gas content along the
Hubble sequence: the blue luminosity and the square of linear diameter. Our
catalogue significantly improves the statistics of previous reference
catalogues and can be used in future studies to define a template ISM content
for 'normal' galaxies along the Hubble sequence. The catalogue can be accessed
on-line at http://dipastro.pd.astro.it/galletta/ismcat/Comment: 12 pages. 4 figures, 6 tables - A&A accepte
Gravitational potential and X-ray luminosities of early-type galaxies observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra
We study dark matter content in early-type galaxies and investigate whether
X-ray luminosities of early-type galaxies are determined by the surrounding
gravitational potential. We derived gravitational mass profiles of 22
early-type galaxies observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra. Sixteen galaxies show
constant or decreasing radial temperature profiles, and their X-ray
luminosities are consistent with kinematical energy input from stellar mass
loss. The temperature profiles of the other 6 galaxies increase with radius,
and their X-ray luminosities are significantly higher. The integrated
mass-to-light ratio of each galaxy is constant at that of stars within 0.5-1
r_e, and increases with radius, where r_e is the effective radius of a galaxy.
The scatter of the central mass-to-light ratio of galaxies was less in K-band
light. At 3r_e, the integrated mass-to-light ratios of galaxies with flat or
decreasing temperature profiles are twice the value at 0.5r_e, where the
stellar mass dominates, and at 6r_e, these increase to three times the value at
0.5r_e. This feature should reflect common dark and stellar mass distributions
in early-type galaxies: Within 3r_e, the mass of dark matter is similar to the
stellar mass, while within 6r_e, the former is larger than the latter by a
factor of two. By contrast, X-ray luminous galaxies have higher gravitational
mass in the outer regions than X-ray faint galaxies. We describe these X-ray
luminous galaxies as the central objects of large potential structures; the
presence or absence of this potential is the main source of the large scatter
in the X-ray luminosity.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in A&
AGN-Induced Cavities in NGC 1399 and NGC 4649
We present an analysis of archival Chandra and VLA observations of the E0
galaxy NGC 1399 and the E2 galaxy NGC 4649 in which we investigate cavities in
the surrounding X-ray emitting medium caused by the central AGN. We calculate
the jet power required for the AGN to evacuate these cavities and find values
of ~8x10^{41} erg/s and ~14x10^{41} erg/s for the lobes of NGC 1399 and
~7x10^{41} erg/s and ~6x10^{41} erg/s for those of NGC 4649. We also calculate
the k/f values for each cavity, where k is the ratio of the total particle
energy to that of electrons radiating in the range of 10 MHz to 10 GHz, and f
is the volume filling factor of the plasma in the cavity. We find that the
values of k/f for the lobes of NGC 1399 are ~93 and ~190, and those of the
lobes of NGC 4649 are ~15000 and ~12000. We conclude that the assumed spectrum
describes the electron distribution in the lobes of NGC 1399 reasonably well,
and that there are few entrained particles. For NGC 4649, either there are many
entrained particles or the model spectrum does not accurately describe the
population of electrons.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Photo-chemical evolution of elliptical galaxies II. The impact of merging-induced starbursts
The effects of late gas accretion episodes and subsequent merger-induced
starbursts on the photo-chemical evolution of elliptical galaxies are studied
and compared to the picture of galaxy formation occurring at high redshift with
an unique and intense starburst modulated by a very short infall, as suggested
by Pipino & Matteucci (2004, Paper I). By means of the comparison with the the
colour-magnitude relations and the [_V]-sigma relation observed in
ellipticals, we conclude that either bursts involving a gas mass comparable to
the mass already transformed into stars during the first episode of star
formation and occurring at any redshift, or bursts occurring at low redshift
(i.e. z<0.2) and with a large range of accreted mass, are ruled out. These
models fail in matching the above relations even if the initial infall
hypothesis is relaxed, and the galaxies form either by means of more
complicated star formation histories or by means of the classical monolithic
model. On the other hand, galaxies accreting a small amount of gas at high
redshift (i.e. z>3) produce a spread in the model results, with respect to
Paper I best model, which is consistent with the observational scatter of the
color-magnitude relations, although there is only marginal agreement with the
[_V]-sigma relation. Therefore, only small perturbations to the standard
scenario seem to be allowed. We stress that the strongest constraints to galaxy
formation mechanisms are represented by the chemical abundances, whereas the
colours can be reproduced under several different hypotheses.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepte
Near-infrared spectroscopy of stellar populations in nearby spiral galaxies
We present high spatial resolution, medium spectral resolution near-infrared
(NIR) H- and K-band long-slit spectroscopy for a sample of 29 nearby (z < 0.01)
inactive spiral galaxies, to study the composition of their NIR stellar
populations. These spectra contain a wealth of diagnostic stellar absorption
lines, e.g. MgI 1.575 micron, SiI 1.588 micron, CO (6-3) 1.619 micron, MgI
1.711 micron, NaI 2.207 micron, CaI 2.263 micron and the 12CO and 13CO
bandheads longward of 2.29 micron. We use NIR absorption features to study the
stellar population and star formation properties of the spiral galaxies along
the Hubble sequence, and we produce the first high spatial resolution NIR
HK-band template spectra for low redshift spiral galaxies along the Hubble
sequence. These templates will find applications in a variety of galaxy
studies. The strength of the absorption lines depends on the luminosity and/or
temperature of stars and, therefore, spectral indices can be used to trace the
stellar population of galaxies. The entire sample testifies that the evolved
red stars completely dominate the NIR spectra, and that the hot young star
contribution is virtually nonexistent.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to MNRAS. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:astro-ph/040313
Integrated Spectroscopy of Bulge Globular Clusters and Fields. II. Implications for stellar population models and elliptical galaxies
Synthetic Lick indices (e.g. Mg_2, Fe, etc.) of Simple Stellar Population
(SSP) models are calibrated for the first time up to solar metallicity with a
sample of Milky Way globular clusters (GCs) which includes the metal rich GCs
of the Galactic bulge. This metallicity range is relevant to elliptical
galaxies. It is shown that the Bulge GCs and integrated light follow the same
correlation between Mg and Fe indices of elliptical galaxies, showing weaker Fe
indices at given Mg indices with respect to models that assume solar-scaled
abundances. This similarity is the robust empirical evidence for enhanced
alpha/Fe ratios in the stellar populations of elliptical galaxies, since the
globular clusters are independently known to be alpha-enhanced. The uniqueness
of this alpha-overabundance solution is checked by exploring the whole range of
model ingredients. We argue that the standard models reproduce the Mg-Fe
correlation at low metallicities because the stellar templates used in the
synthesis are the alpha-enhanced stars of the galactic Halo. These same models,
however, fail to recover the Mg-Fe pattern of Bulge clusters and ellipticals at
high metallicities because the high-metallicity templates are disk stars, which
are not alpha-enhanced. The new SSP models by Thomas, Maraston & Bender (2002)
which incorporate the dependence on alpha/Fe reproduce the Mg and Fe indices of
GCs at all metallicities, with alpha/Fe=+0.3, which is in agreement with
spectroscopic abundance determinations. The Balmer indices (Hbeta, Hdelta,
Hgamma) are very well calibrated, provided the Horizontal Branch morphology is
taken into account. In particular, we reproduce the Balmer lines of NGC 6388
and NGC 6441, which are metal-rich GCs with a tail of warm Horizontal Branch
stars. {Abridged}Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics in press. Only minor
changes after the referee repor
A sample of X-ray emitting normal galaxies from the BMW -- HRI Catalogue
We have obtained a sample of 143 normal galaxies with X-ray luminosity in the
range erg s from the cross-correlation of the ROSAT
HRI Brera Multi-scale Wavelet (BMW -- HRI) Catalogue with the Lyon-Meudon
Extragalactic Database (LEDA). We find that the average X-ray properties of
this sample are in good agreement with those of other samples of galaxies in
the literature. We have selected a complete flux limited serendipitous sample
of 32 galaxies from which we have derived the logN-logS distribution of normal
galaxies in the flux range erg cm s.
The resulting distribution is consistent with the euclidean -1.5 slope.
Comparisons with other samples, such as the Extended Medium Sensitivity Survey,
the ROSAT All Sky Survey, the XMM - Newton/2dF survey and the Chandra Deep
Field Survey indicate that the logN-logS distribution of normal galaxies is
consistent with an euclidean slope over a flux range of about 6 decades.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 19 pages, 7 figures. Full resolution
version of Figure 2 is available at http://www.brera.mi.astro.it/~tajer
The radio properties of a complete, X-ray selected sample of nearby, massive elliptical galaxies
We investigate the radio properties of a complete sample of nearby, massive,
X-ray bright elliptical and S0 galaxies. Our sample contains 18 galaxies with
ROSAT All-Sky Survey X-ray fluxes Fx_(0.1-2.4 keV) > 3 x 10^(-12) erg/s/cm^2,
within a distance of 100 Mpc. For these galaxies, we have complete (18/18) VLA
radio and Chandra X-ray coverage. Nuclear radio emission is detected from 17/18
of the galaxies. Ten of the galaxies exhibit extended radio emission; of these
ten, all but one also exhibit clear evidence of interaction of the radio source
with the surrounding, X-ray emitting gas. Among the seven galaxies with
unresolved radio sources, one has clear, and one has small, cavity-like
features in the Chandra X-ray images; a third has a disturbed X-ray morphology.
Using a radio luminosity limit equivalent to L_(1.4 Ghz) > 10^(23) W/Hz to
calculate the radio-loud fraction, we find that this misses the majority of the
radio detected galaxies in the sample. We determine integrated radio-to-X-ray
flux ratios for the galaxies, GRx, which are shown to span a large range
(factor of 100). We calculate the mass-weighted cooling times within 1 kpc, and
find hints for an anticorrelation with the radio luminosity. We also calculate
limits on k/f, where k is the ratio of the total particle energy to that of
relativistic electrons radiating in the range 10 MHz-10 GHz and f is the volume
filling factor of the plasma in the cavity. The k/f distribution is also broad,
reflecting previous results for larger galaxy clusters. Lowering the X-ray flux
limit, at the expense of less complete VLA and Chandra coverage, increases the
size of our sample to 42 galaxies. Nuclear radio activity is detected in at
least 34/42 of this extended sample.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 19 pages, 11 Figures and 7 Table
- …
