363 research outputs found
A New Empirical Model for the Structural Analysis of Early-type Galaxies and a Critical Review of the Nuker Model
The Nuker law was designed to match the inner few (~3-10) arcseconds of
predominantly nearby (< 30 Mpc) early-type galaxy light-profiles; it was never
intended to describe an entire profile. The Sersic model, on the other hand,
was developed to fit the entire profile; however, due to the presence of
partially depleted galaxy cores, the Sersic model cannot always describe the
very inner region. We have therefore developed a new empirical model consisting
of an inner power-law, a transition region, and an outer Sersic model to
connect the inner and outer structure of elliptical galaxies. Moreover, the
stability of the Nuker model parameters are investigated. Surprisingly, none
are found to be stable quantities; all are shown to vary systematically with a
profile's fitted radial extent, and often by more than 100%. Considering
elliptical galaxies spanning a range of 7.5 magnitudes, the central stellar
density of the underlying host galaxy is observed to increase with galaxy
luminosity until the onset of core formation, detected only in the brightest
elliptical galaxies. We suggest that the so-called ``power-law'' galaxies may
actually be described by the Sersic model over their entire radial range
Correlations among global photometric properties of disk galaxies
Using a two-dimensional galaxy image decomposition technique, we extract
global bulge and disk parameters for a complete sample of early type disk
galaxies in the near infrared K band. We find significant correlation of the
bulge parameter n with the central bulge surface brightness and with
effective radius r_e. Using bivar iate analysis techniques, we find that , and are distributed in a plane with small scatter. We
do not find a strong correlation of n with bulge-to-disk luminosity ratio,
contrary to earlier reports. r_e and the disk scale length r_d are well
correlated for these early type disk galaxies, but with large scatter. We
examine the implications of our results to various bulge formation scenarios in
disk galaxies.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX including 14 figures. To appear in the Astrophysical
Journa
A near infrared photometric plane for ellipticals and bulges of spirals
We report the existence of a single plane in the space of global photometric
parameters describing elliptical galaxies and the bulges of early type spiral
galaxies. The three parameters which define the plane are obtained by fitting
the Sersic form to the brightness distribution obtained from near-infrared K
band images. We find, from the range covered by their shape parameters, that
the elliptical galaxies form a more homogeneous population than the bulges.
Known correlations like the Kormendy relation are projections of the
photometric plane. The existence of the plane has interesting implications for
bulge formation models.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX including 5 figures. To appear in the Astrophysical
Journal Letter
The stellar host in blue compact dwarf galaxies: the need for a two-dimensional fit
The structural properties of the low surface brightness stellar host in blue
compact dwarf galaxies are often studied by fitting r^{1/n} models to the outer
regions of their radial profiles. The limitations imposed by the presence of a
large starburst emission overlapping the underlying component makes this kind
of analysis a difficult task. We propose a two-dimensional fitting methodology
in order to improve the extraction of the structural parameters of the LSB
host. We discuss its advantages and weaknesses by using a set of simulated
galaxies and compare the results for a sample of eight objects with those
already obtained using a one-dimensional technique. We fit a PSF convolved
Sersic model to synthetic galaxies, and to real galaxy images in the B, V, R
filters. We restrict the fit to the stellar host by masking out the starburst
region and take special care to minimize the sky-subtraction uncertainties. In
order to test the robustness and flexibility of the method, we carry out a set
of fits with synthetic galaxies. Furthermore consistency checks are performed
to assess the reliability and accuracy of the derived structural parameters.
The more accurate isolation of the starburst emission is the most important
advantage and strength of the method. Thus, we fit the host galaxy in a range
of surface brightness and in a portion of area larger than in previous
published 1D fits with the same dataset. We obtain robust fits for all the
sample galaxies, all of which, except one, show Sersic indices n very close to
1, with good agreement in the three bands. These findings suggest that the
stellar hosts in BCDs have near-exponential profiles, a result that will help
us to understand the mechanisms that form and shape BCD galaxies, and how they
relate to the other dwarf galaxy classes.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures (low resolution), accepted for publication in
A&A. A higher resolution version of the figures can be provided upon reques
Old and young bulges in late-type disk galaxies
ABRIDGED: We use HSTACS and NICMOS imaging to study the structure and colors
of a sample of nine late-type spirals. We find: (1) A correlation between bulge
and disks scale-lengths, and a correlation between the colors of the bulges and
those of the inner disks. Our data show a trend for bulges to be more
metal-enriched than their surrounding disks, but otherwise no simple
age-metallicity connection between these systems; (2) A large range in bulge
stellar population properties, and, in particular, in stellar ages.
Specifically, in about a half of the late-type bulges in our sample the bulk of
the stellar mass was produced recently. Thus, in a substantial fraction of the
z=0 disk-dominated bulged galaxies, bulge formation occurs after the
formation/accretion of the disk; (3) In about a half of the late-type bulges in
our sample, however, the bulk of the stellar mass was produced at early epochs;
(4) Even these "old" late-type bulges host a significant fraction of stellar
mass in a young(er) c component; (5) A correlation for bulges between stellar
age and stellar mass, in the sense that more massive late-type bulges are older
than less massive late-type bulges. Since the overall galaxy luminosity (mass)
also correlates with the bulge luminosity (mass), it appears that the galaxy
mass regulates not only what fraction of itself ends up in the bulge component,
but also "when" bulge formation takes place. We show that dynamical friction of
massive clumps in gas-rich disks is a plausible disk-driven mode for the
formation of "old" late-type bulges. If disk evolutionary processes are
responsible for the formation of the entire family of late-type bulges, CDM
simulations need to produce a similar number of initially bulgeless disks in
addition to the disk galaxies that are observed to be bulgeless at z=0.Comment: ApJ in press; paper with high resolution figures available at
http://www.exp-astro.phys.ethz.ch/carollo/carollo1_2006.pdf; B, I, and H
surface brightness profiles published in electronic tabular for
Extremely Red Objects in Two Quasar Fields at z ~ 1.5
We present an investigation of the properties and environments of bright
extremely red objects (EROs) found in the fields of the quasars TXS 0145+386
and 4C 15.55, both at z ~ 1.4. There is marginal evidence from Chandra ACIS
imaging for hot cluster gas with a luminosity of a few 10^44 ergs/s in the
field of 4C 15.55. The TXS 0145+386 field has an upper limit at a similar
value, but it also clearly shows an overdensity of faint galaxies. None of the
EROs are detected as X-ray sources. For two of the EROs that have
spectral-energy distributions and rest-frame near-UV spectra that show that
they are strongly dominated by old stellar populations, we determine
radial-surface-brightness profiles from adaptive-optics images. Both of these
galaxies are best fit by profiles close to exponentials, plus a compact nucleus
comprising ~30% of the total light in one case and 8% in the other. Neither is
well fit by an r^1/4-law profile. This apparent evidence for the formation of
massive ~2 X 10^11 disks of old stars in the early universe indicates that at
least some galaxies formed essentially monolithically, with high star-formation
rates sustained over a few 10^8 years, and without the aid of major mergers.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, accepted to Ap
The Luminosity Profiles of Brightest Cluster Galaxies
(Abridged) We have derived detailed R band luminosity profiles and structural
parameters for a total of 430 brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs), down to a
limiting surface brightness of 24.5 mag/arcsec^2. Light profiles were initially
fitted with a Sersic's R^(1/n) model, but we found that 205 (~48) BCGs require
a double component model to accurately match their light profiles. The best fit
for these 205 galaxies is an inner Sersic model, with indices n~1-7, plus an
outer exponential component.
Thus, we establish the existence of two categories of the BCGs luminosity
profiles: single and double component profiles. We found that double profile
BCGs are brighter ~0.2 mag than single profile BCG. In fact, the
Kolmogorov-Smirnov test applied to these subsamples indicates that they have
different total magnitude distributions, with mean values M_R=-23.8 +/- 0.6 mag
for single profile BCGs and M_R=-24.0 +/- 0.5 mag for double profile BCGs. We
find that partial luminosities for both subsamples are indistinguishable up to
r = 15 kpc, while for r > 20 kpc the luminosities we obtain are on average 0.2
mag brighter for double profile BCGs. This result indicates that extra-light
for double profile BCGs does not come from the inner region but from the outer
regions of these galaxies.
The best fit slope of the Kormendy relation for the whole sample is a = 3.13
+/- 0.04$. However, when fitted separately, single and double profile BCGs show
different slopes: a_(single) = 3.29 +/- 0.06 and a_(double)= 2.79 +/- 0.08.
On the other hand, we did not find differences between these two BCGs
categories when we compared global cluster properties such as the BCG-projected
position relative to the cluster X-ray center emission, X-ray luminosity, or
BCG orientation with respect to the cluster position angle.Comment: August 2011 issue of ApJS, volume 195, 15
http://iopscience.iop.org/0067-0049/195/2/1
Black Holes in Pseudobulges and Spheroidals: A Change in the Black Hole-Bulge Scaling Relations at Low Mass
We investigate the relationship between black hole mass and host galaxy
properties for active galaxies with the lowest black hole masses currently
known in galaxy nuclei. Hubble Space Telescope imaging confirms that the host
galaxies have correspondingly low luminosity; they are ~1 mag below L*. In
terms of morphology, ~60% of the members of the sample are disk-dominated, and
all of these are consistent with containing a bulge or (more likely)
pseudobulge, while the remainder are compact systems with no discernible disk
component. In general the compact components of the galaxies do not obey the
fundamental plane of giant elliptical galaxies and classical bulges, but rather
are less centrally concentrated at a given luminosity, much like spheroidal
galaxies. Our results strongly confirm that a classical bulge is not a
requirement for a nuclear black hole. At the same time, the observed ratio of
black hole to bulge mass is nearly an order of magnitude lower in this sample
than that seen for classical bulges. While the M-sigma relation appears to
continue to low mass, it seems that black hole-galaxy scaling relations do
depend on galaxy structure.Comment: to appear in ApJ; 22 pages; 8 figures; original version available at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~jgreene/paper.pd
Evidence for tidal interaction and merger as the origin of galaxy morphology evolution in compact groups
We present the results of a morphological study based on NIR images of 25
galaxies, with different levels of nuclear activity, in 8 Compact Groups of
Galaxies (CGs). We perform independently two different analysis: a isophotal
study and a study of morphological asymmetries. The results yielded by the two
analysis are highly consistent. For the first time, it is possible to show that
deviations from pure ellipses are produced by inhomogeneous stellar mass
distributions related to galaxy interactions and mergers. We find evidence of
mass asymmetries in 74% of the galaxies in our sample. In 59% of these cases,
the asymmetries come in pairs, and are consistent with tidal effects produced
by the proximity of companion galaxies. The symmetric galaxies are generally
small in size or mass, inactive, and have an early-type morphology. In 20% of
the galaxies we find evidence for cannibalism. In 36% of the early-type
galaxies the color gradient is positive (blue nucleus) or flat. Summing up
these results, as much as 52% of the galaxies in our sample could show evidence
of an on going or past mergers. Our observations suggest that galaxies in CGs
merge more frequently under ``dry'' conditions. The high frequency of
interacting and merging galaxies observed in our study is consistent with the
bias of our sample towards CGs of type B, which represents the most active
phase in the evolution of the groups. In these groups we also find a strong
correlation between asymmetries and nuclear activity in early-type galaxies.
This correlation allows us to identify tidal interactions and mergers as the
cause of galaxy morphology transformation in CGs.[abridge]Comment: 64 pages, 35 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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