604 research outputs found
The chemical composition of Ultracompact Dwarf Galaxies in the Virgo and Fornax Clusters
We present spectroscopic observations of ultra compact dwarf (UCD) galaxies
in the Fornax and Virgo Clusters made to measure and compare their stellar
populations. The spectra were obtained on the Gemini-North (Virgo) and
Gemini-South (Fornax) Telescopes using the respective Gemini Multi-Object
Spectrographs.
We estimated the ages, metallicities and abundances of the objects from mea-
surements of Lick line-strength indices in the spectra; we also estimated the
ages and metallicities independently using a direct spectral fitting technique.
Both methods re- vealed that the UCDs are old (mean age 10.8 \pm 0.7 Gyr) and
(generally) metal-rich (mean [Fe/H] = -0.8 \pm 0.1). The alpha-element
abundances of the objects measured from the Lick indices are super-Solar.
We used these measurements to test the hypothesis that UCDs are formed by the
tidal disruption of present-day nucleated dwarf elliptical galaxies. The data
are not consistent with this hypothesis because both the ages and abundances
are significantly higher than those of observed dwarf galaxy nuclei (this does
not exclude disruption of an earlier generation of dwarf galaxies). They are
more consistent with the properties of globular star clusters, although at
higher mean metallicity. The UCDs display a very wide range of metallicity
(-1.7 <[Fe/H]< 0.0), spanning the full range of both globular clusters and
dwarf galaxy nuclei.
We confirm previous reports that most UCDs have high metalliticities for
their luminosities, lying significantly above the canonical
metallicitiy-luminosity relation followed by early-type galaxies. In contrast
to previous work we find that there is no significant difference in either the
mean ages or the mean metallicities of the Virgo and Fornax UCD populations.Comment: 15 pages (including references and appendix), 8 figures (including
appendix
The portrait of Malin 2: a case study of a giant low surface brightness galaxy
The low surface brightness disc galaxy Malin2 challenges the standard theory
of galaxy evolution by its enormous total mass ~2 10^12 Ms which must have been
formed without recent major merger events. The aim of our work is to create a
coherent picture of this exotic object by using the new optical multicolor
photometric and spectroscopic observations at Apache Point Observatory as well
as archival datasets from Gemini and wide-field surveys. We performed the
Malin2 mass modelling, estimated the contribution of the host dark halo and
found that it had acquired its low central density and the huge isothermal
sphere core radius before the disc subsystem was formed. Our spectroscopic data
analysis reveals complex kinematics of stars and gas in the very inner region.
We measured the oxygen abundance in several clumps and concluded that the gas
metallicity decreases from the solar value in the centre to a half of that at
20-30 kpc. We found a small satellite and measured its mass (1/500 of the host
galaxy) and gas metallicity. One of the unique properties of Malin2 turned to
be the apparent imbalance of ISM: the molecular gas is in excess with respect
to the atomic gas for given values of the gas equilibrium turbulent pressure.
We explain this imbalance by the presence of a significant portion of the dark
gas not observable in CO and the Hi 21 cm lines. We also show that the
depletion time of the observed molecular gas traced by CO is nearly the same as
in normal galaxies. Our modelling of the UV-to-optical spectral energy
distribution favours the exponentially declined SFH over a single-burst
scenario. We argue that the massive and rarefied dark halo which had formed
before the disc component well describes all the observed properties of Malin2
and there is no need to assume additional catastrophic scenarios proposed
previously to explain the origin of giant LSB galaxies. [Abbreviated]Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Tidal streams in newly discovered M32 analogues: evidence for the stripping scenario
We present two newly-discovered compact elliptical (cE) galaxies, exhibiting
clear evidence of tidal steams, and found during a search of SDSS DR7 for cE
candidates. The structural parameters of the cEs are derived using GALFIT,
giving effective radii, Re, of 388 and 263 parsecs, and B-band mean surface
brightnesses within Re of 19.4 and 19.2 magnitudes per arcsec squared. We have
re-analysed the SDSS spectra, which indicate that they possess young to
intermediate-age stellar populations. These two cEs provide direct evidence, a
"smoking gun", for the process of tidal stripping that is believed to be the
origin of M32-type galaxies. Both are in small groups with a large spiral
fraction, suggesting that we may be seeing the formation of such cE galaxies in
dynamically young environments. The more compact of the galaxies is found in a
small group not unlike the Local Group, and thus provides an additional model
for understanding M32.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures. Accepted to MNRA
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