889 research outputs found
A flat faint end of the Fornax cluster galaxy luminosity function
We analyse the photometric properties of the early-type Fornax cluster dwarf
galaxy population (M_V>-17 mag), based on a wide field imaging study of the
central cluster area in V and I band-passes with IMACS/Magellan at Las Campanas
Observatory. We create a fiducial sample of ~100 Fornax cluster dwarf
ellipticals (dEs) with -16.6<M_V<-8.8 mag in the following three steps: (1) To
verify cluster membership, we measured I-band surface brightness fluctuations
(SBF) distances to candidate dEs known from previous surveys; (2) We
re-assessed morphological classifications for those candidate dEs that are too
faint for SBF detection; and (3) We searched for new candidate dEs in the
size-luminosity regime close to the resolution limit of previous surveys. The
resulting fiducial dE sample follows a well-defined surface brightness -
magnitude relation, showing that Fornax dEs are about 40% larger than Local
Group dEs. The sample also defines a colour-magnitude relation similar to that
of Local Group dEs. The early-type dwarf galaxy luminosity function in Fornax
has a very flat faint end slope alpha = -1.1 +/- 0.1. We compare the number of
dwarfs per unit mass with those in other environments and find that the Fornax
cluster fits well into a general trend of a lack of high-mass dwarfs in more
massive environments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 244
'Dark galaxies and lost baryons', Cambridge University Press, editors J. I.
Davies & M. D. Disne
Dust and star formation in the centre of NGC 3311
NGC 3311 is the central galaxy of the Hydra I galaxy cluster. It has a hot
interstellar medium and hosts a central dust lane with emission lines. These
dust lanes are frequent in elliptical galaxies, but the case of NGC 3311 might
be particularly interesting for problems of dust lifetime and the role of cool
gas in the central parts. We aim to use archival HST images and MUSE data to
investigate the central dust structure of NGC 3311. We used the tool PyParadise
to model the stellar population and extract the emission lines. The HST/ACS
colour map reveals the known dust structures, but also blue spots, which are
places of strong line emission. A dusty 'mini-jet' emanates from the centre.
The distribution of the emission line gas matches the dust silhouette almost
exactly. Close to the brightest Halpha emission, the ratio [NII]/Halpha
resembles that of HII-regions; in the outer parts, [NII] gets stronger and is
similar to LINER-like spectra. The gas kinematics is consistent with that of a
rotating disc. The Doppler shifts of the strongest line emissions, which
indicate the areas of highest star formation activity, smoothly fit into the
disc symmetry. The metallicity is supersolar. The presence of neutral gas is
indicated by the fit residuals of the stellar NaI D absorption line, which we
interpret as interstellar absorption. We estimate the mass of the neutral gas
to be of the order of the X-ray mass. The dynamical mass infers a stellar
population of intermediate age, whose globular clusters have already been
identified. Our findings can be harmonised in a scenario in which the star
formation is triggered by the accretion of cold gas onto a pre-existing
gas/dust disc or ring. Newly produced dust then contributes to the longevity of
the dust.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted by Astron.Astrophy
Drought induces moderate, diverse changes in the odour of grassland species
Plants react to drought stress with numerous changes including altered emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOC) from leaves, which provide protection against oxidative tissue damage and mediate numerous biotic interactions. Despite the share of grasslands in the terrestrial biosphere, their importance as carbon sinks and their contribution to global biodiversity, little is known about the influence of drought on VOC profiles of grassland species. Using coupled gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, we analysed the odorants emitted by 22 European grassland species exposed to an eight-week-lasting drought treatment (DT; 30% water holding capacity, WHC). We focused on the odorants emitted during the light phase from whole plant shoots in their vegetative stage. Emission rates were standardised to the dry weight of each shoot. Well-watered (WW) plants (70% WHC) served as control. Drought-induced significant changes included an increase in total emission rates of plant VOC in six and a decrease in three species. Diverging effects on the number of emitted VOC (chemical richness) or on the Shannon diversity of the VOC profiles were detected in 13 species. Biosynthetic pathways-targeted analyses revealed 13 species showing drought-induced higher emission rates of VOC from one, two, three, or four major biosynthetic pathways (lipoxygenase, shikimate, mevalonate and methylerythritol phosphate pathway), while six species exhibited reduced emission rates from one or two of these pathways. Similarity trees of odorant profiles and their drought-induced changes based on a biosynthetically informed distance metric did not match species phylogeny. However, a phylogenetic signal was detected for the amount of terpenoids released by the studied species under WW and DT conditions. A comparative analysis of emission rates of single compounds released by WW and DT plants revealed significant VOC profile dissimilarities in four species only. The moderate drought-induced changes in the odorant emissions of grassland species are discussed with respect to their impact on trophic interactions across the food web
What does (not) drive the variation of the low-mass end of the stellar initial mass function of early-type galaxies
The stellar initial mass function (IMF) seems to be variable and not
universal, as argued in the literature in the last three decades. Several
relations among the low-mass end of the IMF slope and other stellar population,
photometric or kinematic parameters of massive early-type galaxies (ETGs) have
been proposed, but a consolidated agreement on a factual cause of the observed
variations has not been reached yet. We investigate the relations between the
IMF and other stellar population parameters in NGC 3311, the central galaxy of
the Hydra I cluster. NGC 3311 is characterized by old and metal-rich stars,
like other massive ETGs, but has unusual increasing stellar velocity dispersion
and [Fe] profiles. We use spatially resolved MUSE observations to
obtain stellar population properties using Bayesian full-spectrum fitting in
the central part of NGC 3311 to compare the IMF slope against other stellar
parameters with the goal of assessing their relations/dependencies. For NGC
3311, we unambiguously invalidate the previously observed direct correlation
between the IMF slope and the local stellar velocity dispersion, confirming
some doubts already raised in the literature. This relation may arise as a
spatial coincidence only, between the region with the largest stellar velocity
dispersion, with that where the oldest, population is found
and dominates. We also show robust evidence that the proposed IMF-metallicity
relation is contaminated by the degeneracy between these two parameters. The
tightest correlations we found are those between stellar age and IMF and
between galactocentric radius and IMF. The variation of the IMF is not due to
kinematical, dynamical, or global properties in NGC 3311. We speculate that IMF
might be dwarf-dominated in the "red-nuggets" formed at high redshifts that
ended up being the central cores of today's giant ellipticals. [Abridged]Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Evidence for a Young Stellar Population in NGC 5018
Two absorption line indices, Ca II and Hdelta/FeI4045, measured from high
resolution spectra are used with evolutionary synthesis models to verify the
presence of a young stellar population in NGC 5018. The derived age of this
population is about ~2.8 Gyr with a metallicity roughly solar and it completely
dominates the integrated light of the galaxy near 4000 A.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures (figs 3-7 are color figures), to be published in
the May 2000 issue of the Astrophysical Journa
KMOS view of the Galactic Centre I. Young stars are centrally concentrated
The Galactic centre hosts a crowded, dense nuclear star cluster with a
half-light radius of 4 pc. Most of the stars in the Galactic centre are cool
late-type stars, but there are also >100 hot early-type stars in the central
parsec of the Milky Way. These stars are only 3-8 Myr old. Our knowledge of the
number and distribution of early-type stars in the Galactic centre is
incomplete. Only a few spectroscopic observations have been made beyond a
projected distance of 0.5 pc of the Galactic centre. The distribution and
kinematics of early-type stars are essential to understand the formation and
growth of the nuclear star cluster. We cover the central >4pc^2 of the Galactic
centre using the integral-field spectrograph KMOS. We extracted more than 1,000
spectra from individual stars and identified early-type stars based on their
spectra. Our data set contains 114 bright early-type stars: 6 have narrow
emission lines, 23 are Wolf-Rayet stars, 9 stars have featureless spectra, and
76 are O/B type stars. Our wide-field spectroscopic data confirm that the
distribution of young stars is compact, with 90% of the young stars identified
within 0.5 pc of the nucleus. We identify 24 new O/B stars primarily at large
radii. We estimate photometric masses of the O/B stars and show that the total
mass in the young population is >12,000M_sun. The O/B stars all appear to be
bound to the Milky Way nuclear star cluster, while less than 30% belong to the
clockwise rotating disk. The central concentration of the early-type stars is a
strong argument that they have formed in situ. A large part of the young O/B
stars is not on the disk, which either means that the early-type stars did not
all form on the same disk or that the disk is dissolving rapidly. [abridged]Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures, matches journal version: Corrected typos,
corrected Notes in Table B.
Analysis of medium resolution spectra by automated methods - application to M55 and omega Centauri
We have employed feedforward neural networks trained on synthetic spectra in
the range 3800 to 5600 AA with resolutions of 2-3 AA to determine metallicities
from spectra of about 1000 main-sequence turn-off, subgiant and red giant stars
in the globular clusters M55 and omega Cen. The overall metallicity accuracies
are of the order of 0.15 to 0.2 dex. In addition, we tested how well the
stellar parameters logg and Teff can be retrieved from such data without
additional colour or photometric information. We find overall uncertainties of
0.3 to 0.4 dex for logg and 140 to 190 K for Teff. In order to obtain some
measure of uncertainty for the determined values of [Fe/H], logg and Teff, we
applied the bootstrap method for the first time to neural networks for this
kind of parametrization problem. The distribution of metallicities for stars in
omega Cen clearly shows a large spread in agreement with the well known
multiple stellar populations in this cluster.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Hydra I cluster core - II. Kinematic complexity in a rising velocity dispersion profile around the cD galaxy NGC 3311
NGC 3311, the central galaxy of the Hydra I cluster, shows signatures of
recent infall of satellite galaxies from the cluster environment. Previous work
has shown that the line-of-sight velocity dispersion of the stars and globular
clusters in the extended halo of NGC 3311 rises up to the value of the cluster
velocity dispersion. We performed multi-object spectroscopic observations of
the diffuse stellar halo of NGC 3311 using VLT/FORS2 in MXU mode to mimic a
coarse `IFU'. We use pPXF to extract the kinematic information. We find a
homogeneous velocity and velocity dispersion field within r<10 kpc. Beyond this
radius, both the velocities and dispersions start to depend on azimuth angle
and show a significant intrinsic scatter. The inner spheroid of NGC 3311 can be
described as a slow rotator. Outside 10 kpc the cumulative angular momentum is
rising. If the radial dependence alone is considered, the velocity dispersion
does not simply rise but fills an increasingly large range of values with two
well defined envelopes. The lower envelope is about constant at 200 km/s. The
upper envelope rises smoothly, joining the velocity dispersion of the outer
cluster galaxies. We interpret this behaviour as the superposition of tracer
populations with increasingly shallower radial distributions between the
extremes of the inner stellar populations and the cluster galaxies. Simple
Jeans models illustrate that a range of of mass profiles with different
anisotropies can account for all observed velocity dispersions, including
radial MOND models. Jeans models using one tracer population with a unique
density profile are not able to explain the large range of the observed
kinematics. Previous claims about the cored dark halo of NGC 3311 are therefore
probably not valid. This may in general apply to central cluster galaxies with
rising velocity dispersion profiles, where infall processes are important.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The early-type dwarf galaxy population of the Fornax cluster
AIMS: We analyse the photometric properties of the early-type Fornax cluster
dwarf galaxy population, based on a wide field imaging study of the central
cluster area in V and I. We used the instrument/telescope combination
IMACS/Magellan at Las Campanas Observatory, providing much larger light
collecting area and better image resolution than previous surveys.
METHODS: We create a fiducial sample of Fornax cluster dwarf ellipticals
(dEs) in the following three steps: (1) To verify cluster membership, we
measured I-band surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) distances to candidate
dEs; (2) We re-assessed morphological classifications for candidate dEs too
faint for SBF detection; and (3) We searched for new candidate dEs in the
size-luminosity regime close to the resolution limit of previous surveys.
RESULTS: (1) We confirm cluster membership for 28 candidate dEs in the range
-16.6<M_V<-10.1 mag by means of SBF distances. We find no SBF background
galaxy. (2) Of 51 further candidate dEs in the range -13.2<M_V<-8.6 mag, 2/3
are confirmed as probable cluster members by morphological re-assessment, while
1/3 are re-classified as probable background objects. (3) We find 12 new dE
candidates in the range -12.3<M_V<-8.8 mag.
The surface brightness-magnitude relation defined by the resulting fiducial
dE sample shows that Fornax dEs are about 40% larger than Local Group dEs. The
Fornax dE sample furthermore defines a colour-magnitude relation that appears
slightly shallower than that of Local Group dEs. The early-type dwarf galaxy
luminosity function in Fornax has a faint end slope alpha = -1.1 +/- 0.1.
We discuss these findings in the context of structure formation theories.
(ABRIDGED)Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Uses special
aa.cl
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