34 research outputs found
Star formation history and environment of the dwarf galaxy UGCA 92
We present a quantitative star formation history of the nearby dwarf galaxy
UGCA 92. This irregular dwarf is situated in the vicinity of the Local Group of
galaxies in a zone of strong Galactic extinction (IC 342 group of galaxies).
The galaxy was resolved into stars with HST/ACS including old red giant branch.
We have constructed a model of the resolved stellar populations and measured
the star formation rate and metallicity as function of time. The main star
formation activity period occurred about 8 - 14 Gyr ago. These stars are mostly
metal-poor, with a mean metallicity [Fe/H] ~ -1.5 -- -2.0 dex. About 84 per
cent of the total stellar mass was formed during this event. There are also
indications of recent star formation starting about 1.5 Gyr ago and continuing
to the present. The star formation in this event shows moderate enhancement
from ~ 200 Myr to 300 Myr ago. It is very likely that the ongoing star
formation period has higher metallicity of about -0.6 -- -0.3 dex. UGCA 92 is
often considered to be the companion to the starburst galaxy NGC 1569.
Comparing our star formation history of UGCA 92 with that of NGC 1569 reveals
no causal or temporal connection between recent star formation events in these
two galaxies. We suggest that the starburst phenomenon in NGC 1569 is not
related to the galaxy's closest dwarf neighbours and does not affect their star
formation history.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted to MNRA
The LMC impact on the kinematics of the Milky Way satellites: clues from the running solar apex
Dwarf galaxies provide a unique opportunity for studying the evolution of the
Milky Way (MW) and the Local Group as a whole. Analysing the running solar apex
based on the kinematics of the MW satellites, we discovered an unexpected
behaviour of the dipole term of the radial velocity distribution as a function
of the galactocentric distance. The nearby satellites (<100 kpc) have a bulk
motion with an amplitude of 140-230 km/s while the more distant ones show an
isotropic distribution of the radial velocities. Such strong solar apex
variations can not be explained by the net rotation of the satellites, as it
would require an enormously high rotation rate (~970 km/s). If we exclude the
LMC and its most closely related members from our sample, this does not
suppress the bulk motion of the nearby satellites strongly enough.
Nevertheless, we have demonstrated that the observed peculiar kinematics of the
MW satellites can be explained by a perturbation caused by the first infall of
the LMC. First, we `undone' the effect of the perturbation by integrating the
orbits of the MW satellites backwards (forwards) with (without) massive LMC. It
appears that the present-day peculiar enhancement of the solar apex in the
inner halo is diminished the most in the case of 2x10^{11} Msun LMC. Next, in
self-consistent high-resolution N-body simulations of the MW-LMC interaction,
we found that the solar apex shows the observed behaviour only for the halo
particles with substantial angular momentum, comparable to that of the MW
satellites.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Emission sparks around M 81 and in some dSph galaxies
We use H-alpha images of three clumps of young stars situated between M81 and
NGC3077 to estimate their star formation rate. Radial velocities of the clumps
measured by us, as well as the velocity of HII-region in the dSph galaxy KDG61
are compatible with their location at the outskirts of a large rotating gaseous
disc around M81. In contrast to KDG61, radial velocity of the emission knot in
the dSph galaxy DDO44, +213+-25 km/s, tells us that this H-alpha spark belongs
to the dSph galaxy itself. F475W and F814W images of DDO44 extracted from the
HST archive reveal 8 bluish (B-I < 0.8) stars apparently associated with the
H-alpha knot.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepte
The Extragalactic Distance Database: Color-Magnitude Diagrams
The CMDs/TRGB (Color-Magnitude Diagrams/Tip of the Red Giant Branch) section
of the Extragalactic Distance Database contains a compilation of observations
of nearby galaxies from the Hubble Space Telescope. Approximately 250 (and
increasing) galaxies in the Local Volume have CMDs and the stellar photometry
tables used to produce them available through the web. Various stellar
populations that make up a galaxy are visible in the CMDs, but our primary
purpose for collecting and analyzing these galaxy images is to measure the TRGB
in each. We can estimate the distance to a galaxy by using stars at the TRGB as
standard candles. In this paper we describe the process of constructing the
CMDs and make the results available to the public.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 long table, submitted to Astronomical Journa
ACS imaging of 25 galaxies in nearby groups and in the field
We present HST/ACS images and color-magnitude diagrams for 25 nearby galaxies
with radial velocities V_LG < 500 km/s. Distances are determined based on the
luminosities of stars at the tip of the red giant branch that range from 2 Mpc
to 12 Mpc. Two of the galaxies, NGC 4163 and IC 4662, are found to be the
nearest known representatives of blue compact dwarf (BCD) objects. Using
high-quality data on distances and radial velocities of 110 nearby field
galaxies, we derive their mean Hubble ratio to be 68 km/(s Mpc) with standard
deviation of 15 km/(s Mpc). Peculiar velocities of most of the galaxies, V_pec
= V_LG - 68 D, follow a Gaussian distribution with sigma_v = 63 km/s, but with
a tail towards high negative values. Our data displays the known correlation
between peculiar velocity and galaxy elevation above the Local Supercluster
plane. The small observed fraction of galaxies with high peculiar velocities,
V_pec < -500 km/s, may be understood as objects associated with nearby groups
(Coma I, Eridanus) outside the Local volume.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, accepted to A
Distance and mass of the M104 (Sombrero) group
Distances and radial velocities of galaxies in the vicinity of the luminous
early-type galaxy M 104 (Sombrero) are used to derive its dark matter mass.
Two dwarf galaxies: UGCA 307 and KKSG 30 situated near M 104 were observed
with the Advanced Camera for Surveys on the Hubble Space Telescope. The
distances Mpc (UGCA 307) and Mpc
(KKSG 30) were determined using the tip of the red giant branch method. These
distances are consistent with the dwarf galaxies being satellites of Sombrero.
Using radial velocities and projected separations of UGCA 307, KKSG 30, and a
third galaxy with an accurate distance (KKSG 29), as well as 12 other assumed
companions with less accurate distances, the total mass of M 104 is estimated
to be . At the K-band luminosity of the
Sombrero galaxy of , its total mass-to-luminosity ratio
is , which is about three times higher
than that of luminous bulgeless galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
The Hubble flow around the CenA / M83 galaxy complex
We present HST/ACS images and color-magnitude diagrams for 24 nearby galaxies
in and near the constellation of Centaurus with radial velocities V_LG < 550
km/s. Distances are determined based on the luminosities of stars at the tip of
the red giant branch that range from 3.0 Mpc to 6.5 Mpc. The galaxies are
concentrated in two spatially separated groups around Cen A (NGC 5128) and M 83
(NGC 5236). The Cen A group itself has a mean distance of 3.76 +/-0.05 Mpc, a
velocity dispersion of 136 km/s, a mean harmonic radius of 192 kpc, and an
estimated orbital/virial mass of (6.4 - 8.1) x 10^12 M_sun. This elliptical
dominated group is found to have a relatively high mass-to-light ratio: M/L_B =
125 M_sun/L_sun. For the M 83 group we derived a mean distance of 4.79 +/-0.10
Mpc, a velocity dispersion of 61 km/s, a mean harmonic radius of 89 kpc, and
estimated orbital/virial mass of (0.8 - 0.9) x 10^12 M_sun. This spiral
dominated group is found to have a relatively low M/L_B = 34 M_sun/L_sun. The
radius of the zero-velocity surface around Cen A lies at R_0 = 1.40 +/-0.11
Mpc, implying a total mass within R_0 of M_T = (6.0 +/-1.4) x 10^12 M_sun. This
value is in good agreement with the Cen A virial/orbital mass estimates and
provides confirmation of the relatively high M/L_B of this elliptical-dominated
group. The centroids of both the groups, as well as surrounding field galaxies,
have very small peculiar velocities, < 25 km/s, with respect to the local
Hubble flow with H_0 = 68 km/s/Mpc.Comment: 31 pages including 9 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication
in Astronomical Journal, 133, N0. 2 (February), 200
KKH 22, the first dwarf spheroidal satellite of IC 342
We present observations with the Advanced Camera for Surveys on the Hubble
Space Telescope of the nearby dwarf spheroidal galaxy KKH 22 = LEDA 2807114 in
the vicinity of the massive spiral galaxy IC 342. We derived its distance of
3.12+-0.19 Mpc using the tip of red giant branch (TRGB) method. We also used
the 6 m BTA spectroscopy to measure a heliocentric radial velocity of the
globular cluster in KKH22 to be +30+-10 km/s. The dSph galaxy KKH 22 has the
V-band absolute magnitude of -12.19 mag and the central surface brightness
mu_v,0 = 24.1 mag/sq.arcsec. Both the velocity and the distance of KKH 22 are
consistent with the dSph galaxy being gravitationally bound to IC 342. Another
nearby dIr galaxy, KKH 34, with a low heliocentric velocity of +106 km/s has
the TRGB distance of 7.28+-0.36 Mpc residing in the background with respect to
the IC 342 group. KKH 34 has a surprisingly high negative peculiar velocity of
-236+-26 km/s.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted in A&
Cosmicflows-2: The Data
Cosmicflows-2 is a compilation of distances and peculiar velocities for over
8000 galaxies. Numerically the largest contributions come from the
luminosity-linewidth correlation for spirals, the TFR, and the related
Fundamental Plane relation for E/S0 systems, but over 1000 distances are
contributed by methods that provide more accurate individual distances:
Cepheid, Tip of the Red Giant Branch, Surface Brightness Fluctuation, SNIa, and
several miscellaneous but accurate procedures. Our collaboration is making
important contributions to two of these inputs: Tip of the Red Giant Branch and
TFR. A large body of new distance material is presented. In addition, an effort
is made to assure that all the contributions, our own and those from the
literature, are on the same scale. Overall, the distances are found to be
compatible with a Hubble Constant H_0 = 74.4 +-3.0 km/s/Mpc. The great interest
going forward with this data set will be with velocity field studies.
Cosmicflows-2 is characterized by a great density and high accuracy of distance
measures locally, falling to sparse and coarse sampling extending to z=0.1.Comment: To be published in Astronomical Journal. Two extensive tables to be
available on-line. Table 1 available at http://edd.ifa.hawaii.edu select
catalog `Cosmicflows-2 Distances