SIMBAD references

2020MNRAS.493.1686L - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 493, 1686-1707 (2020/April-1)

Structural and stellar-population properties versus bulge types in Sloan Digital Sky Survey central galaxies.

LUO Y., FABER S.M., RODRIGUEZ-PUEBLA A., WOO J., GUO Y., KOO D.C., PRIMACK J.R., CHEN Z., YESUF H.M., LIN L., BARRO G., FANG J.J., PANDYA V., HUERTAS-COMPANY M. and MAO S.

Abstract (from CDS):

This paper studies pseudo-bulges (P-bulges) and classical bulges (C-bulges) in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) central galaxies using the new bulge indicator ∆Σ1, which measures relative central stellar-mass surface density within 1 kpc. We compare ∆Σ1 to the established bulge-type indicator ∆<μe> from Gadotti (2009) and show that classifying by ∆Σ1 agrees well with ∆<μe>. ∆Σ1 requires no bulge-disc decomposition and can be measured on SDSS images out to z = 0.07. Bulge types using it are mapped on to 20 different structural and stellar-population properties for 12 000 SDSS central galaxies with masses 10.0 < log M*/M☉ < 10.4. New trends emerge from this large sample. Structural parameters show fairly linear log-log relations versus ∆Σ1 and ∆<μe> with only moderate scatter, while stellar-population parameters show a highly non-linear `elbow' in which specific star formation rate remains roughly flat with increasing central density and then falls rapidly at the elbow, where galaxies begin to quench. P-bulges occupy the low-density end of the horizontal arm of the elbow and are universally star forming, while C-bulges occupy the elbow and the vertical branch and exhibit a wide range of star formation rates at a fixed density. The non-linear relation between central density and star formation rate has been seen before, but this mapping on to bulge class is new. The wide range of star formation rates in C-bulges helps to explain why bulge classifications using different parameters have sometimes disagreed in the past. The elbow-shaped relation between density and stellar indices suggests that central structure and stellar populations evolve at different rates as galaxies begin to quench.

Abstract Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: bulges - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: formation - galaxies: fundamental parameters - galaxies: structure

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/MNRAS/493/1686): tableb1.dat>

Status at CDS : All or part of tables of objects could be ingested in SIMBAD with priority 2.

Simbad objects: 3

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