676 research outputs found
Extended stellar kinematics of elliptical galaxies in the Fornax cluster
We present extended stellar kinematics for a sample of 13 elliptical galaxies
in the Fornax cluster. Major-axis velocity dispersion profiles (VDPs) and
rotation curves (RCs) are given for 12 of the galaxies. A major feature of this
data is the spatial extension: for 8 galaxies the data extends beyond 1 R_e,
and for 5 it extends beyond 2 R_e. Compared to the previously available data,
this corresponds to an increase in spatial coverage by a factor from 1 to 5.
Five of the ellipticals in the sample turn out to be rotationally-supported
systems, having positive rotation parameter log (V/sigma)*. One of these five,
and another 3 galaxies from the remaining sample, display evidence for bar-like
kinematics. The data indicate that the true number of `dynamically hot' stellar
systems, is much lower than previously thought: of the Es in the present sample
only 1/4 are confirmed as `pressure-supported' systems. The data reveal a host
of individual peculiarities, like: wiggles, strong gradients, and asymmetries
in the rotation curve and/or in the velocity dispersion profile, thus showing
that the presence of kinematically distinct components and/or triaxiality is a
common characteristic of this class of object.Comment: 27 pages, includes 15 eps figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
Sup
Structure and Evolution of Galaxy Clusters: Internal Dynamics of ABCG 209 at z~0.21
We study the internal dynamics of the rich galaxy cluster ABGC 209 on the
basis of new spectroscopic and photometric data. The distribution in redshift
shows that ABCG 209 is a well isolated peak of 112 detected member galaxies at
z=0.209, characterised by a high value of the line-of-sight velocity
dispersion, sigma_v=1250-1400 Km/s, on the whole observed area (1 Mpc/h from
the cluster center), that leads to a virial mass of M=1.6-2.2x10^15 M_sun
within the virial radius, assuming the dynamical equilibrium. The presence of a
velocity gradient in the velocity field, the elongation in the spatial
distribution of the colour-selected likely cluster members, the elongation of
the X-ray contour levels in the Chandra image, and the elongation of cD galaxy
show that ABCG 209 is characterised by a preferential NW-SE direction. We also
find a significant deviation of the velocity distribution from a Gaussian, and
relevant evidence of substructure and dynamical segregation. All these facts
show that ABCG 209 is a strongly evolving cluster, possibly in an advanced
phase of merging.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures. A&A in pres
Shapley Supercluster Survey: Ram-Pressure Stripping vs. Tidal Interactions in the Shapley Supercluster
We present two new examples of galaxies undergoing transformation in the
Shapley supercluster core. These low-mass (stellar mass from 0.4E10 to 1E10
Msun) galaxies are members of the two clusters SC-1329-313 (z=0.045) and
SC-1327-312 (z=0.049). Integral-field spectroscopy complemented by imaging in
ugriK bands and in Halpha narrow-band are used to disentangle the effects of
tidal interaction (TI) and ram-pressure stripping (RPS). In both galaxies,
SOS-61086 and SOS-90630, we observe one-sided extraplanar ionized gas extending
respectively 30kpc and 41kpc in projection from their disks. The galaxies'
gaseous disks are truncated and the kinematics of the stellar and gas
components are decoupled, supporting the RPS scenario. The emission of the
ionized gas extends in the direction of a possible companion for both galaxies
suggesting a TI. The overall gas velocity field of SOS-61086 is reproduced by
ad hoc N-body/hydrodynamical simulations of RPS acting almost face-on and
starting about 250Myr ago, consistent with the age of the young stellar
populations. A link between the observed gas stripping and the cluster-cluster
interaction experienced by SC-1329-313 and A3562 is suggested. Simulations of
ram pressure acting almost edge-on are able to fully reproduce the gas velocity
field of SOS-90630, but cannot at the same time reproduce the extended tail of
outflowing gas. This suggests that an additional disturbance from a TI is
required. This study adds a piece of evidence that RPS may take place in
different environments with different impacts and witnesses the possible effect
of cluster-cluster merger on RPS.Comment: 27 pages, 28 figures, MNRAS accepte
ACCESS - V. Dissecting ram-pressure stripping through integral-field spectroscopy and multi-band imaging
We study the case of a bright (L>L*) barred spiral galaxy from the rich
cluster A3558 in the Shapley supercluster core (z=0.05) undergoing ram-pressure
stripping. Integral-field spectroscopy, complemented by multi-band imaging,
allows us to reveal the impact of ram pressure on the interstellar medium. We
study in detail the kinematics and the physical conditions of the ionized gas
and the properties of the stellar populations. We observe one-sided extraplanar
ionized gas along the full extent of the galaxy disc. Narrow-band Halpha
imaging resolves this outflow into a complex of knots and filaments. The gas
velocity field is complex with the extraplanar gas showing signature of
rotation. In all parts of the galaxy, we find a significant contribution from
shock excitation, as well as emission powered by star formation. Shock-ionized
gas is associated with the turbulent gas outflow and highly attenuated by dust.
All these findings cover the whole phenomenology of early-stage ram-pressure
stripping. Intense, highly obscured star formation is taking place in the
nucleus, probably related to the bar, and in a region 12 kpc South-West from
the centre. In the SW region we identify a starburst characterized by a 5x
increase in the star-formation rate over the last ~100 Myr, possibly related to
the compression of the interstellar gas by the ram pressure. The scenario
suggested by the observations is supported and refined by ad hoc
N-body/hydrodynamical simulations which identify a rather narrow temporal range
for the onset of ram-pressure stripping around t~60 Myr ago, and an angle
between the galaxy rotation axis and the intra-cluster medium wind of ~45 deg.
Taking into account that the galaxy is found ~1 Mpc from the cluster centre in
a relatively low-density region, this study shows that ram-pressure stripping
still acts efficiently on massive galaxies well outside the cluster cores.Comment: 46 pages, 21 figures, accepted for publication; MNRAS 201
The Connection between Star-Forming Galaxies, AGN Host Galaxies and Early-Type Galaxies in the SDSS
We present a study of the connection between star-forming galaxies, AGN host
galaxies, and normal early-type galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS). Using the SDSS DR5 and DR4plus data, we select our early-type galaxy
sample in the color versus color-gradient space, and we classify the spectral
types of the selected early-type galaxies into normal, star-forming, Seyfert,
and LINER classes, using several spectral line flux ratios. We investigate the
slope in the fundamental space for each class of early-type galaxies and find
that there are obvious differences in the slopes of the fundamental planes
(FPs) among the different classes of early-type galaxies, in the sense that the
slopes for Seyferts and star-forming galaxies are flatter than those for normal
galaxies and LINERs. This may be the first identification of the systematic
variation of the FP slope among the subclasses of early-type galaxies. The
difference in the FP slope might be caused by the difference in the degree of
nonhomology among different classes or by the difference of gas contents in
their merging progenitors. One possible scenario is that the AGN host galaxies
and star-forming galaxies are formed by gas-rich merging and that they may
evolve into normal early-type galaxies after finishing their star formation or
AGN activities.Comment: 5 pages with emulateapj, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letter
The Wide Field Spectrograph (WiFeS): Performance and Data Reduction
This paper describes the on-telescope performance of the Wide Field
Spectrograph (WiFeS). The design characteristics of this instrument, at the
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics (RSAA) of the Australian National
University (ANU) and mounted on the ANU 2.3m telescope at the Siding Spring
Observatory has been already described in an earlier paper (Dopita et al.
2007). Here we describe the throughput, resolution and stability of the
instrument, and describe some minor issues which have been encountered. We also
give a description of the data reduction pipeline, and show some preliminary
results.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Science, 15pp, 11
figure
Evolution of UV -- NIR Structural Properties of Cluster Galaxies
Structural parameters (half light radius r_e, mean surface brightness _e and Sersic index n) are derived for the galaxy cluster A 209, at z = 0.21, in UV and optical restframe, and for the cluster EIS 0048, at z = 0.64, in UV, optical and NIR restframe. This data set, together with previous optical and NIR measurements for the cluster AC 118 at z=0.31}, constitutes the first large sample (N~250) of cluster galaxies whose UV - NIR structure can be investigated up to a look-back time of ~6 Gyr (Omega_m=0.3, Omega_L=0.7 and H_0=70 Km/s/Mpc). The analysis is performed (1) by direct comparison of log r_e, and log n, in UV-OPT and OPT-NIR, and (2) by using the structural parameters to estimate UV-OPT and OPT-NIR internal colour gradients of galaxies. We classify the galaxies as spheroids or disks according to the shape of the optical light profile of galaxies, and investigate separately the evolution in the properties of both populations. On the average, we find that the bulk of spheroids and disks are more concentrated at longer wavelengths, having Delta(log r_e) > 0, and Delta(log n) < 0. The mean value of Delta(log n) in OPT-NIR seems to be the quantity more dependent on z, in the sense that it decreases at higher redshift. In particular, we find a strong decrease in the ratio of OPT to NIR Sersic indices for the disks at z~0.64. By comparing the estimated colour gradients (grad(UV-OPT) and grad(OPT-NIR)) with age and metallicity models, we find that, for the spheroids, both grad(UV-OPT) and grad(OPT-NIR) are weakly dependent on the redshift, confirming that metallicity is the primary effect to drive the gradients. For the disks, metallicity is not able at all to describe the observed range of colour gradients. Age or age+metallicity are responsible for the radial colour distribution of disk dominated galaxies
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