72 research outputs found

    Near-infrared luminosity function and colours of dwarf galaxies in the Coma Cluster

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    We present K-band observations of the low-luminosity galaxies in the Coma cluster, which are responsible for the steep upturn in the optical luminosity function at M_R ~ -16, discovered recently. The main results of this study are (i) The optical−-near-infrared colours of these galaxies imply that they are dwarf spheroidals. The median M-K colour for galaxies with -19.3 < M_K < -16.3 is 3.6 mag. (ii) The K-band luminosity function in the Coma cluster at the faint-end is not wee constrained, because of the uncertainties due to the field-to-field variance of the background. However, within the estimate large errors, it is consistent with the R-band luminosity function, shifted by ∌3\sim3 magnitudes. (iii) Many of the cluster dwarfs lie in a region of the B-K vs. B-R colour-colour diagram where background galaxies are rare Local dwarf spheroidal galaxies lie in this region too. This suggests that a better measurement of the K-band cluster luminosity function can be made if the field-to-field variance of the background can be measured as a function of colour. (iv) If we assume that none of the galaxies in the region of the B-K vs. B-R plane given in (iii) in our cluster fields are background, and that all the cluster galaxies with 15.5<K<18.515.5 < K < 18.5 lie in this region of the plane, then we measure alpha = -1.41 +/- 0.35 for -19.3 < M_K < -16.3, where alpha is the logarithmic slope of the luminosity function.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figs, 2 tabs, MNRAS in press; email: [email protected], [email protected]

    The temperatures of dust-enshrouded AGNs

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    A high density of massive dark objects (MDOs), probably supermassive black holes, in the centres of nearby galaxies has been inferred from recent observations. There are various indications that much of the accretion responsible for producing these objects took place in dust-enshrouded active galactic nuclei (AGNs). If so, then measurements of the intensity of background radiation and the source counts in the far-infrared and submillimetre wavebands constrain the temperature of dust in these AGNs. An additional constraint comes from the hard X-ray background, if this is produced by accretion. One possibility is that the dust shrouds surrounding the accreting AGNs are cold, about 30 K. In this event, the dusty AGNs could be some subset of the population of luminous distant sources discovered at 850 microns using the SCUBA array on the JCMT, as proposed by Almaini et al. (1999). An alternative is that the dust shrouds surrounding the accreting AGNs are much hotter (> 60 K). These values are closer to the dust temperatures of a number of well-studied low-redshift ultraluminous galaxies that are thought to derive their power from accretion. If the local MDO density is close to the maximum permitted, then cold sources cannot produce this density without the submillimetre background being overproduced if they accrete at high radiative efficiency, and thus a hot population is required. If the dust-enshrouded accretion occurred at similar redshifts to that taking place in unobscured optical quasars, then a significant fraction of the far-infrared background radiation measured by COBE at 140 microns, but very little of the submilllimetre background at 850 microns, may have been produced by hot dust-enshrouded AGNs which may have already been seen in recent X-ray surveys.Comment: MNRAS in pres

    The faint end of the galaxy luminosity function

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    We present and discuss optical measurements of the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function down to M_R = -10 in five different local environments of varying galaxy density and morphological content. The environments we studied, in order of decreasing galaxy density, are the Virgo Cluster, the NGC 1407 Group, the Coma I Group, the Leo Group and the NGC 1023 Group. Our results come from a deep wide-angle survey with the NAOJ Subaru 8 m Telescope on Mauna Kea and are sensitive down to very faint surface-brightness levels. Galaxies were identified as group or cluster members on the basis of their surface brightness and morphology. The faintest galaxies in our sample have R ~ 22.5. There were thousands of fainter galaxies but we cannot distinguish cluster members from background galaxies at these faint limits so do not attempt to determine a luminosity function fainter than M_R = -10. In all cases, there are far fewer dwarfs than the numbers of low mass halos anticipated by cold dark matter theory. The mean logarithmic slope of the luminosity function between M_R = -18 and M_R = -10 is alpha ~ -1.2, far shallower than the cold dark matter mass function slope of alpha ~ -1.8. We would therefore need to be missing about 90 per cent of the dwarfs at the faint end of our sample in all the environments we study to achieve consistency with CDM theory.Comment: 23 pages, 26 figs, MNRAS in pres

    How much of the extreme luminosity of IRAS F10214+4724 can be attributed to gravitational lensing

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    \noindent The galaxy IRAS F10214+4724, discovered in a spectroscopic survey of a 0.2 Jy sample by Rowan-Robinson and collaborators in 1991, is significantly more luminous than any other known galaxy. Its bolometric luminosity is comparable to those of the most luminous quasars. Recent obsservations have revealed a candidate foreground group of galaxies, which might gravitationally lens F10214+4724, thus explaining much of its luminosity. High-resolution imaging of F10214+4724 has revealed that most of its near-IR flux comes from a circularly symmetric arc; this also supports the gravitational lens interpretation. In such a scenario, F10214+4724 would be the high-redshift analogue of the ultraluminous IRAS galaxies observed locally. This work presents a simple statistical lensing model to investigate this possibility.Comment: 30 pages, available by at ftp://hubble.ifa.hawaii.edu/pub/na

    Dwarf galaxies in four rich clusters with 0.02 < z < 0.14

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    Deep measurements are presented of four rich clusters of galaxies: Abell 1367 (z=0.022), Abell 2199 (z=0.030), Abell 1795 (z=0.063), and Abell 1146 (z=0.141). All clusters have an excess of galaxies at faint magnitudes above blank sky fields. We correct for background contamination and measure the luminosity function of these galaxies in each cluster, and then combine these luminosity functions to get better statistics. The resultant combined luminosity function is rising at faint magnitudes, with a logarithmic slope -1.5 < \alpha < -1.2 for -18 < M_B < -13 and -19 < M_R < -15. This is similar to what has been observed independently in the Coma cluster. The colours of these faint galaxies suggest that they are dwarf spheroidals.Comment: 16 pages, 7 fig, 4 tab, MNRAS in press Fig 1 (big) available from autho

    Dwarf galaxies in the Dynamically Evolved NGC 1407 Group

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    The NGC 1407 Group stands out among nearby structures by its properties that suggest it is massive and evolved. It shares properties with entities that have been called fossil groups: the 1.4 magnitude differential between the dominant elliptical galaxy and the second brightest galaxy comes close to satisfying the definition that has been used to define the fossil class. There are few intermediate luminosity galaxies, but a large number of dwarfs in the group. We estimate there are 250 group members to the depth of our survey. The slope of the faint end of the luminosity function (reaching M_R = -12) is alpha = -1.35. Velocities for 35 galaxies demonstrate that this group with one dominant galaxy has a mass of 7 X 10^13 M_sun and M/L_R = 340. Two galaxies in close proximity to NGC 1407 have very large blueshifts. The most notable is the second brightest galaxy, NGC 1400, with a velocity of -1072 km/s with respect to the group mean. We report the detection of X-ray emission from this galaxy and from the group.Comment: final version to appear in MNRAS, URL for data include
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