2,247 research outputs found
The Fundamental Plane for cluster E and S0 galaxies
We have analyzed the Fundamental Plane (FP) for a sample of 226 E and S0
galaxies in ten clusters of galaxies. For photometry in Gunn r the best fitting
plane is log r_e=1.24 log sigma - 0.82 log _e + cst. The scatter is 0.084 in
log r_e. The slope of the FP is not significantly different from cluster to
cluster. The residuals of the FP correlate weakly with the velocity dispersion
and the surface brightness. Thus, to avoid biases of derived distances the
galaxies need to be selected in a homogeneous way. The FP has significant
intrinsic scatter. No other structural parameters like ellipticity or isophotal
shape can reduce the scatter significantly. The Mg_2-sigma relation differs
slightly from cluster to cluster. Galaxies in clusters with lower velocity
dispersions have systematically lower Mg_2. With the current stellar population
models, it is in best agreement with our results regarding the FP if the
offsets are mainly caused by differences in metallicity. Most of the distances
that we derive from the FP imply small peculiar motions, <1000km/s. The zero
point of the FP must therefore be quite stable. The residuals from the
Mg_2-sigma relation may be used to flag galaxies with deviant populations, and
possibly to correct the distance determinations for the deviations.Comment: 20 pages, gzipped PostScript, 14 figures included. Accepted for
publication in MNRA
An assessment of the evidence from ATLAS3D for a variable initial mass function
The ATLAS3D Survey has reported evidence for a non-universal stellar initial
mass function (IMF) for early type galaxies (ETGs) (Cappellari et al. 2012,
2013b,a). The IMF was constrained by comparing stellar mass measurements from
kinematic data with those from spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting. Here
we investigate possible effects of scatter in the reported stellar mass
measurements and their potential impact on the IMF determination. We find that
a trend of the IMF mismatch parameter with the kinematic mass to light ratio,
comparable to the trend observed by Cappellari et al. (2012), could arise if
the Gaussian errors of the kinematic mass determination are typically 30%.
Without additional data, it is hard to separate between the option that the IMF
has a true large intrinsic variation or the option that the errors in the
determination are larger than anticipated. A correlation of the IMF with other
properties would help to make this distinction, but no strong correlation has
been found yet. The strongest correlation is with velocity dispersion. However,
it has a large scatter and the correlation depends on sample selection and
distance measurements. The correlation with velocity dispersion could be partly
caused by the colour-dependent calibration of the surface brightness
fluctuation distances of Tonry et al. (2001). We find that the K-band
luminosity limited ATLAS3D Survey is incomplete for the highest M/L galaxies
below 10^10.3 M_sun. There is a significant IMF - velocity dispersion trend for
galaxies with SED masses above this limit, but no trend for galaxies with
kinematic masses above this limit. We also find an IMF trend with distance, but
no correlation between nearest neighbour ETGs, which excludes a large
environmental dependence. Our findings do not rule out the reported IMF
variations, but they suggest that further study is needed.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 15 pages, 11 figures, 4 table
On The Robustness of z=0-1 Galaxy Size Measurements Through Model and Non-Parametric Fits
We present the size-stellar mass relations of nearby (z=0.01-0.02) Sloan
Digital Sky Survey galaxies, for samples selected by color, morphology, Sersic
index n, and specific star formation rate. Several commonly employed size
measurement techniques are used, including single Sersic fits, two-component
Sersic models, and a non-parametric method. Through simple simulations, we show
that the non-parametric and two-component Sersic methods provide the most
robust effective radius measurements, while those based on single Sersic
profiles are often overestimates, especially for massive red/early-type
galaxies. Using our robust sizes, we show for all sub-samples that the
mass-size relations are shallow at low stellar masses and steepen above ~ 3-4 x
10^{10}\msun. The mass-size relations for galaxies classified as late-type,
low-n, and star-forming are consistent with each other, while blue galaxies
follow a somewhat steeper relation. The mass-size relations of early-type,
high-n, red, and quiescent galaxies all agree with each other but are somewhat
steeper at the high-mass end than previous results. To test potential
systematics at high redshift, we artificially redshifted our sample (including
surface brightness dimming and degraded resolution) to z=1 and re-fit the
galaxies using single Serisc profiles. The sizes of these galaxies before and
after redshifting are consistent and we conclude that systematic effects in
sizes and the size-mass relation at z ~ 1 are negligible. Interestingly, since
the poorer physical resolution at high redshift washes out bright galaxy
substructures, single-Sersic fitting appears to provide more reliable and
unbiased effective radius measurements at high z than for nearby, well-resolved
galaxies.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
The average structural evolution of massive galaxies can be reliably estimated using cumulative galaxy number densities
Galaxy evolution can be studied observationally by linking progenitor and
descendant galaxies through an evolving cumulative number density selection.
This procedure can reproduce the expected evolution of the median stellar mass
from abundance matching. However, models predict an increasing scatter in main
progenitor masses at higher redshifts, which makes galaxy selection at the
median mass unrepresentative. Consequently, there is no guarantee that the
evolution of other galaxy properties deduced from this selection are reliable.
Despite this concern, we show that this procedure approximately reproduces the
evolution of the average stellar density profile of main progenitors of M =
10^11.5 Msun galaxies, when applied to the EAGLE hydrodynamical simulation. At
z > 3.5 the aperture masses disagree by about a factor two, but this
discrepancy disappears when we include the expected scatter in cumulative
number densities. The evolution of the average density profile in EAGLE broadly
agrees with observations from UltraVISTA and CANDELS, suggesting an inside-out
growth history for these massive galaxies over 0 < z < 5. However, for z < 2
the inside-out growth trend is stronger in EAGLE. We conclude that cumulative
number density matching gives reasonably accurate results when applied to the
evolution of the mean density profile of massive galaxies.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Accepted by MNRAS Letter
Galactic Bulges
We review current knowledge on the structure, properties and evolution of
galactic bulges, considering particularly common preconceptions in the light of
recent observational results.Comment: in press, Annual Review Astron. Astrophys. 35 1997. Plain tex, 9
figures included. Also available by anonymous ftp at
ftp://ftp.ast.cam.ac.uk/pub/gil
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