955 research outputs found
Evidence for intermediate-age stellar populations in early-type galaxies from K-band spectroscopy
The study of stellar populations in early-type galaxies in different
environments is a powerful tool for constraining their star formation
histories. This study has been traditionally restricted to the optical range,
where dwarfs around the turn-off and stars at the base of the RGB dominate the
integrated light at all ages. The near-infrared spectral range is especially
interesting since in the presence of an intermediate-age population, AGB stars
are the main contributors. In this letter, we measure the near-infrared indices
NaI and D for a sample of 12 early-type galaxies in low density
environments and compare them with the Fornax galaxy sample presented by Silva
et al. (2008). The analysis of these indices in combination with Lick/IDS
indices in the optical range reveals i) the NaI index is a metallicity
indicator as good as C4668 in the optical range, and ii) D is a
tracer of intermediate-age stellar populations. We find that low-mass galaxies
in low density environments show higher NaI and D than those located
in Fornax cluster, which points towards a late stage of star formation for the
galaxies in less dense environments, in agreement with results from other
studies using independent methods.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Line strengths of early-type galaxies
In this paper we present measurements of velocity dispersions and Lick
indices for 509 galaxies in the local Universe, based on high signal-to-noise,
long slit spectra obtained with the 1.52 m ESO telescope at La Silla. The
conversion of our measurements into the Lick/IDS system was carried out
following the general prescription of Worthey and Ottaviani 1997. Comparisons
of our measurements with those of other authors show, in general, good
agreement. We also examine the dependence between these indices (e.g., Hbeta,
Mg_2, Fe5270 and NaD) and the central velocity dispersion (sigma), and we find
that they are consistent with those previously reported in the literature.
Benefiting from the relatively large size of the sample, we are able to
investigate the dependence of these relations on morphology and environment,
here represented by the local galaxy density. We find that for metallic lines
these relations show no significant dependence on environment or morphology,
except in the case of NaD, which shows distinct behavior for E and S0. On the
other hand, the Hbeta-logsigma shows a significant difference as a function of
the local density of galaxies, which we interpret as being caused by the
truncation of star formation in high density environments. Comparing our
results with those obtained by other authors we find a few discrepancies,
adding to the ongoing debate about the nature of these relations. Finally, we
report that the scatter of the Mg indices versus sigma relations correlate with
Hbeta, suggesting that age may contribute to the scatter. Furthermore, this
scatter shows no significant dependence on morphology or environment. Our
results are consistent with the current downsizing model, where low mass
galaxies have an extended star formation history (abridged).Comment: 88 pages, 24 figures, to be published in AJ, for further information
see http://staff.on.br/ogand
Kinematic Properties and Stellar Populations of Faint Early-Type Galaxies: II. Line-Strength Measurements of Central Coma Galaxies
We present line-strength measurements for 74 early-type galaxies in the core
of the Coma cluster reaching down to velocity dispersions, sigma, of 30 km/s.
The index-sigma relations for our sample, including galaxies with sigma<100
km/s (low-sigma), differ in shape depending on which index is used. We notice
two types of relations for the metallic indices: one showing a break in the
slope around ~100 km/s, and another group with strong linear relations between
an index and log sigma. We find no connection between the behavior of
index-sigma relations with either alpha- or Fe-peak elements. However, we find
indications that the relations are tighter for indices which do not depend on
the micro-turbulent velocities of stellar atmospheres. We confirm previous
results that low-sigma galaxies including dE/dS0s are on average younger, less
metal rich, and have lower [alpha/Fe] in comparison to E/S0s. Our data show
that these trends derived for high-sigma galaxies extend down to dE/dS0s. This
is a factor of ~2 lower in sigma than previously published work. We confirm
that the observed anti-correlation between age and metallicity for high-sigma
galaxies is consistent with the effects of correlated errors. Low-sigma
galaxies also show a similar relation between age and metallicity as a result
of correlated errors. However, they are offset from this relationship so that,
on average, they are less metal rich and younger than their high-sigma
counterparts.Comment: Accepted For Publication in ApJ, corrected error bar
Oxygen Metallicity Determinations from Optical Emission Lines in Early-type Galaxies
We measured the oxygen abundances of the warm (T) phase of gas
in seven early-type galaxies through long-slit observations. A template spectra
was constructed from galaxies void of warm gas and subtracted from the
emission-line galaxies, allowing for a clean measurement of the nebular lines.
The ratios of the emission lines are consistent with photoionization, which
likely originates from the UV flux of post-asymototic giant branch (PAGB)
stars. We employ H II region photoionization models to determine a mean oxygen
metallicity of solar for the warm interstellar medium (ISM) in
this sample. This warm ISM 0.5 to 1.5 solar metallicity is consistent with
modern determinations of the metallicity in the hot (T)
ISM and the upper range of this warm ISM metallicity is consistent with stellar
population metallicity determinations. A solar metallicity of the warm ISM
favors an internal origin for the warm ISM such as AGB mass loss within the
galaxy.Comment: Accepted Astrophysical Journa
The stellar population histories of early-type galaxies. III. The Coma Cluster
We present stellar population parameters of twelve early-type galaxies (ETGs)
in the Coma Cluster based on spectra obtained using the Low Resolution Imaging
Spectrograph on the Keck II Telescope. Our data allow us to examine in detail
the zero-point and scatter in their stellar population properties. Our ETGs
have SSP-equivalent ages of on average 5-8 Gyr with the models used here, with
the oldest galaxies having ages of ~10 Gyr old. This average age is identical
to the mean age of field ETGs. Our ETGs span a large range in velocity
dispersion but are consistent with being drawn from a population with a single
age. Specifically, ten of the twelve ETGs are consistent within their formal
errors of having the same age, 5.2+/-0.2 Gyr, over a factor of more than 750 in
mass. We therefore find no evidence for downsizing of the stellar populations
of ETGs in the core of the Coma Cluster. We suggest that Coma Cluster ETGs may
have formed the majority of their mass at high redshifts but suffered small but
detectable star formation events at z~0.1-0.3. Previous detections of
'downsizing' from stellar populations of local ETGs may not reflect the same
downsizing seen in lookback studies of RSGs, as the young ages of the local
ETGs represent only a small fraction of their total masses. (abridged)Comment: 49 pages, 20 figures (19 EPS, 1 JPEG). MNRAS, in press. For version
with full resolution of Fig. 1 see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sctrager/coma.pdf; for Table 2, see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sctrager/coma_table2.pdf; for Table B3, see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sctrager/coma_tableB3.pd
Elemental Abundances in the X-Ray Gas of Early-Type Galaxies with XMM and Chandra Observations
The source of hot gas in elliptical galaxies is thought to be due to stellar
mass loss, with contributions from supernova events and possibly from infall
from a surrounding environment. This picture predicts supersolar values for the
metallicity of the gas toward the inner part of the galaxy, which can be tested
by measuring the gas phase abundances. We use high-quality data for 10 nearby
early-type galaxy from XMM-Newton, featuring both the EPIC and the Reflection
Grating Spectrometer, where the strongest emission lines are detected with
little blending; some Chandra data are also used. We find excellent consistency
in the elemental abundances between the different XMM instruments and good
consistency with Chandra. Differences in abundances with aperture size and
model complexity are examined, but large differences rarely occur. For a
two-temperature thermal model plus a point source contribution, the median Fe
and O abundances are 0.86 and 0.44 of the Solar value, while Si and Mg
abundances are similar to that for Fe. This is similar to stellar abundances
for these galaxies but supernovae were expected to enhance the gas phase
abundances considerably, which is not observed.Comment: 35 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
The Stellar Population Histories of Early-Type Galaxies. II. Controlling Parameters of the Stellar Populations
We analyze single-stellar-population (SSP) equivalent parameters for 50 local
elliptical galaxies as a function of their structural parameters. These
galaxies fill a two-dimensional plane in the four-dimensional space of [Z/H],
log t, log , and [E/Fe]. SSP age and velocity dispersion can be taken
as the two independent parameters that specify a galaxy's location in this
``hyperplane.'' The hyperplane can be decomposed into two sub-relations: (1) a
``Z-plane,'' in which [Z/H] is a linear function of log and log t; and
(2) a relation between [E/Fe] and in which [E/Fe] is larger in
high- galaxies. Cluster and field ellipticals follow the same
hyperplane, but their (,t) distributions within it differ. Nearly all
cluster galaxies are old; the field ellipticals span a large range in SSP age.
The tight Mg-- relations of these ellipticals can be understood as
two-dimensional projections of the metallicity hyperplane showing it edge-on;
the tightness of these relations does not necessarily imply a narrow range of
ages at fixed . The relation between [E/Fe] and is consistent
with a higher effective yield of Type II SNe elements at higher . The
Z-plane is harder to explain and may be a powerful clue to star formation in
elliptical galaxies if it proves to be general. Present data favor a
``frosting'' model in which low apparent SSP ages are produced by adding a
small frosting of younger stars to an older base population. If the frosting
abundances are close to or slightly greater than the base population, simple
two-component models run along lines of constant in the Z-plane, as
required. This favors star formation from well-mixed pre-enriched gas rather
than unmixed low-metallicity gas from an accreted object. (Abridged)Comment: To be published in the June 2000 issue of the Astronomical Journal.
28 pages, 13 figures, uses emulateap
Europium doping of zincblende GaN by ion implantation
Eu was implanted into high quality cubic (zincblende) GaN (ZB-GaN) layers grown by molecular beam epitaxy. Detailed structural characterization before and after implantation was performed by x-ray diffraction (XRD) and Rutherford backscattering/channeling spectrometry. A low concentration ( direction, while a Ga substitutional site is observed for W-GaN:Eu. The implantation damage in ZB-GaN:Eu could partly be removed by thermal annealing, but an increase in the wurtzite phase fraction was observed at the same time. Cathodoluminescence, photoluminescence (PL), and PL excitation spectroscopy revealed several emission lines which can be attributed to distinct Eu-related optical centers in ZB-GaN and W-GaN inclusions
Diffraction effects and inelastic electron transport in angle-resolved microscopic imaging applications
We analyze the signal formation process for scanning electron microscopic imaging applications on crystalline specimens. In accordance with previous investigations, we find nontrivial effects of incident beam diffraction on the backscattered electron distribution in energy and momentum. Specifically, incident beam diffraction causes angular changes of the backscattered electron distribution which we identify as the dominant mechanism underlying pseudocolor orientation imaging using multiple, angle-resolving detectors. Consequently, diffraction effects of the incident beam and their impact on the subsequent coherent and incoherent electron transport need to be taken into account for an in-depth theoretical modeling of the energy and momentum distribution of electrons backscattered from crystalline sample regions. Our findings have implications for the level of theoretical detail that can be necessary for the interpretation of complex imaging modalities such as electron channeling contrast imaging (ECCI) of defects in crystals. If the solid angle of detection is limited to specific regions of the backscattered electron momentum distribution, the image contrast that is observed in ECCI and similar applications can be strongly affected by incident beam diffraction and topographic effects from the sample surface. As an application, we demonstrate characteristic changes in the resulting images if different properties of the backscattered electron distribution are used for the analysis of a GaN thin film sample containing dislocations
Stellar populations of early-type galaxies in different environments I. Line-strength indices
Aims: This paper commences a series devoted to the study of the stellar
content of early-type galaxies. The goal of the series is to set constraints on
the evolutionary status of these objects.
Methods: In this paper we describe the details of the galaxy sample, the
observations, and the data reduction. Line-strength indices and velocity
dispersions sigma are measured in 98 early-type galaxies drawn from different
environments, and the relation of the indices with the velocity dispersion
analysed in detail.
Results: The present sample indicates that some of the index-sigma relations
depend on galaxy environment. In particular, the slope of the relation between
Balmer lines and sigma is steeper for galaxies in the Virgo cluster, small
groups, and in the field than for galaxies in the Coma cluster. In several
indices there is also a significant offset in the zero point between the
relations defined by the different subsamples. The slopes of the index-sigma
relation for the Virgo and low-density environment galaxies are explained by a
variation of both age and metallicity with velocity dispersion, as previously
noted in other studies. For the galaxies in the Coma cluster, however, the
relation of the indices with sigma only requires a variation of the abundance
along the sigma sequence. In agreement with other studies we find that the
models that better reproduce the slopes are those in which the alpha elements
vary more than the Fe-peak elements along the sigma sequence, while, at a given
sigma, older galaxies show an higher alpha/Fe ratio.
Conclusions: The results can be explained assuming that galaxies in the Coma
cluster have experienced a truncated star formation and chemical enrichment
history compared to a more continuous time-extended history for their
counterparts in lower density environments.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
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