2010MNRAS.409.1330W


Query : 2010MNRAS.409.1330W

2010MNRAS.409.1330W - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 409, 1330-1346 (2010/December-3)

The Tully–Fisher relations of early-type spiral and S0 galaxies.

WILLIAMS M.J., BUREAU M. and CAPPELLARI M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We demonstrate that the comparison of Tully–Fisher relations (TFRs) derived from global H I linewidths to TFRs derived from the circular-velocity profiles of dynamical models (or stellar kinematic observations corrected for asymmetric drift) is vulnerable to systematic and uncertain biases introduced by the different measures of rotation used. We therefore argue that to constrain the relative locations of the TFRs of spiral and S0 galaxies, the same tracer and measure must be used for both samples. Using detailed near-infrared imaging and the circular velocities of axisymmetric Jeans models of 14 nearby edge-on Sa–Sb spirals and 14 nearby edge-on S0s drawn from a range of environments, we find that S0s lie on a TFR with the same slope as the spirals, but are on average 0.53±0.15 mag fainter at KS band at a given rotational velocity. This is a significantly smaller offset than that measured in earlier studies of the S0 TFR, which we attribute to our elimination of the bias associated with using different rotation measures and our use of earlier-type spirals as a reference. Since our measurement of the offset avoids systematic biases, it should be preferred to previous estimates. A spiral stellar population in which star formation is truncated would take ≈1 Gyr to fade by 0.53 mag at KS band. If S0s are the products of a simple truncation of star formation in spirals, then this finding is difficult to reconcile with the observed evolution of the spiral/S0 fraction with redshift. Recent star formation could explain the observed lack of fading in S0s, but the offset of the S0 TFR persists as a function of both stellar and dynamical mass. We show that the offset of the S0 TFR could therefore be explained by a systematic difference between the total mass distributions of S0s and spirals, in the sense that S0s need to be smaller or more concentrated than spirals.

Abstract Copyright: 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation2010 RAS

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: kinematics and dynamics - galaxies: spiral - galaxies: structure

Simbad objects: 36

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Number of rows : 36
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 128 GiG 00 29 15.0429950112 +02 51 50.564329164   13.2       ~ 205 0
2 ESO 151-4 G 00 56 07.33 -53 11 27.6   14.85   13.07   ~ 19 0
3 NGC 891 H2G 02 22 32.907 +42 20 53.95 11.08 10.81 9.93 7.86   ~ 1666 2
4 NGC 1032 AG? 02 39 23.6373 +01 05 37.652   13.2       ~ 95 1
5 NGC 1023 AG? 02 40 24.0133575864 +39 03 47.663392896 10.91 10.35 9.35 7.83   ~ 660 2
6 NGC 1381 GiP 03 36 31.6592184144 -35 17 42.739221912 12.90 12.47 11.50 11.02   ~ 254 1
7 ACO S 373 ClG 03 38 29.4 -35 27 08           ~ 1820 0
8 NGC 1596 GiP 04 27 38.1079224792 -55 01 39.852944076   12.01 10.97 10.54   ~ 116 0
9 NGC 1886 Sy2 05 21 48.1563158664 -23 48 36.315007812   13.62   12.28   ~ 78 0
10 NGC 2310 AG? 06 53 53.9856718776 -40 51 45.766145412 13.20 12.68 11.76 11.16   ~ 78 1
11 ESO 311-12 AG? 07 47 34.050 -41 27 07.71   12.83   11.14   ~ 42 0
12 NAME HYA SUPERCL SCG 08 57.9 +03 10           ~ 176 0
13 NGC 3203 GiG 10 19 33.8163340224 -26 41 55.783685292   13.22   11.65   ~ 65 0
14 NAME Hydra I Cluster ClG 10 36 36.0 -27 31 04           ~ 838 1
15 NGC 3390 LIN 10 48 04.343 -31 32 00.04   13.24 13.41 11.43   ~ 87 0
16 NGC 3957 Sy2 11 54 01.5349526640 -19 34 08.004900504   13.00   11.42   ~ 90 0
17 NGC 4302 GiP 12 21 42.477 +14 35 51.94   13.4 11.61     ~ 327 0
18 NAME Virgo Cluster ClG 12 26 32.1 +12 43 24           ~ 6634 0
19 NGC 4469 GiG 12 29 27.997 +08 45 00.63   12.6       ~ 168 0
20 NGC 4703 Sy2 12 49 18.9608997312 -09 06 30.518470296   14.5       ~ 42 0
21 NGC 4710 H2G 12 49 38.958 +15 09 55.76   11.6       ~ 310 0
22 MCG-01-33-071 EmG 13 01 49.5420859728 -08 20 10.039392456   14.0   12.85 13.3 ~ 53 0
23 ESO 443-42 GiG 13 03 29.7234464952 -29 49 43.429524960   14.01   12.53   ~ 79 0
24 NGC 5084 Sy2 13 20 16.923 -21 49 39.28   11.15 12.21 9.84 10.5 ~ 179 0
25 NGC 5746 GiP 14 44 56.005 +01 57 17.06   12.3       ~ 357 0
26 NGC 5775 GiP 14 53 57.653 +03 32 40.10   13.0 11.34     ~ 434 2
27 IC 4767 GiG 18 47 41.6730879000 -63 24 20.291818680   14.67 12.96 13.00 12.41 ~ 80 0
28 NGC 6722 GiG 19 03 40.3875744312 -64 53 40.120010520   13.56   11.92   ~ 45 0
29 NGC 6771 EmG 19 18 39.4799507328 -60 32 46.274870724 14.17 13.41 12.52 11.97   ~ 63 1
30 ESO 185-53 GiG 20 03 01.0502950224 -55 56 52.938896496   14.33   12.68   ~ 29 0
31 IC 4937 GiG 20 05 17.563 -56 15 22.32   14.91   13.41   ~ 40 0
32 ESO 597-36 GiG 20 48 14.7948630048 -19 50 57.268042908   15.41   13.29   ~ 59 0
33 IC 5096 GiG 21 18 21.511 -63 45 38.43   13.32   11.73 12.3 ~ 64 0
34 NGC 7123 AG? 21 50 46.575 -70 20 03.08   13.29   11.89   ~ 45 0
35 IC 5176 Sy2 22 14 55.928 -66 50 57.88   13.54   11.97 12.4 ~ 102 0
36 ESO 240-11 EmG 23 37 49.4188489776 -47 43 38.430144948   13.05   11.69 12.3 ~ 113 1

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