research

Optical-Near Infrared Color Gradients of Elliptical Galaxies and Their Environmental Dependence

Abstract

We have studied the environmental effect on optical-NIR color gradients of 273 nearby elliptical galaxies. Color gradient is a good tool to study the evolutionary history of elliptical galaxies, since the steepness of the color gradient reflects merging history of early types. When an elliptical galaxy goes through many merging events, the color gradient can be get less steep or reversed due to mixing of stars. One simple way to measure color gradient is to compare half-light radii in different bands. We have compared the optical and near infrared half-light radii of 273 early-type galaxies from Pahre(1999). Not surprisingly, we find that re_{e}(V)s (half-light radii measured in V-band) are in general larger than re_{e}(K)s (half-light radii measured in K-band). However, when divided into different environments, we find that elliptical galaxies in the denser environment have gentler color gradients than those in the less dense environment. Our finding suggests that elliptical galaxies in the dense environment have undergone many merging events and the mixing of stars through the merging have created the gentle color gradients.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of the 6th East Asian Meeting of Astronomy, held at Seoul National University, Korea, from October 18-22, 200

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions