2006AJ....132.1074R


Query : 2006AJ....132.1074R

2006AJ....132.1074R - Astron. J., 132, 1074-1099 (2006/September-0)

Hubble space telescope STIS spectra of nuclear star clusters in spiral galaxies: dependence of age and mass on Hubble type.

ROSSA J., VAN DER MAREL R.P., BOKER T., GERSSEN J., HO L.C., RIX H.-W., SHIELDS J.C. and WALCHER C.-J.

Abstract (from CDS):

We study the nuclear star clusters (NCs) in spiral galaxies of various Hubble types using spectra obtained with the STIS on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We observed the nuclear clusters in 40 galaxies, selected from two previous HST WFPC2 imaging surveys. At a spatial resolution of ∼0".2 the spectra provide a better separation of cluster light from underlying galaxy light than is possible with ground-based spectra. Approximately half of the spectra have a sufficiently high signal-to-noise ratio for detailed stellar population analysis. For the other half we only measure the continuum slope, as quantified by the B-V color. To infer the star formation history, metallicity, and dust extinction, we fit weighted superpositions of single-age stellar population templates to the high signal-to-noise ratio spectra. We use the results to determine the luminosity-weighted age, mass-to-light ratio, and masses of the clusters. Approximately half of the sample clusters contain a population younger than 1 Gyr. The luminosity-weighted ages range from 10 Myr to 10 Gyr. The stellar populations of NCs are generally best fit as a mixture of populations of different ages. This indicates that NCs did not form in a single event, but that instead they had additional star formation long after the oldest stars formed. On average, the sample clusters in late-type spirals have a younger luminosity-weighted mean age than those in early-type spirals (<logτ>L=8.37±0.25 vs. 9.23±0.21). The average mass-weighted ages are older by ∼0.7 dex, indicating that there often is an underlying older population that does not contribute much light but does contain most of the mass. The average cluster masses are smaller in late-type spirals than in early-type spirals (logM=6.25±0.21 vs. 7.63±0.24) and exceed the masses typical of globular clusters. The cluster mass correlates loosely with total galaxy luminosity. It correlates more strongly with both the Hubble type of the host galaxy and the luminosity of its bulge. The latter correlation has the same slope as the well-known correlation between supermassive black hole mass and bulge luminosity. The properties of both nuclear clusters and black holes in the centers of spiral galaxies are therefore intimately connected to the properties of the host galaxy, and in particular its bulge component. Plausible formation scenarios have to account for this. We discuss various possible selection biases in our results, but conclude that none of them can explain the differences seen between clusters in early- and late-type spirals. The inability to infer spectroscopically the populations of faint clusters does introduce a bias toward younger ages, but not necessarily toward higher masses.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Galaxies: Evolution - Galaxies: Nuclei - Galaxies: Spiral - Galaxies: Star Clusters - Galaxies: Stellar Content

Simbad objects: 46

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Number of rows : 46
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 300 GiG 00 54 53.4465638304 -37 41 03.168402396 8.83 8.69 8.13 7.46   ~ 1503 2
2 NGC 428 AGN 01 12 55.709 +00 58 53.69   12.1   12.0 12.1 ~ 232 0
3 NGC 450 H2G 01 15 30.4565036568 -00 51 39.125259576   13.4   13.3 13.2 ~ 227 0
4 M 33 GiG 01 33 50.8965749232 +30 39 36.630403128 6.17 6.27 5.72     ~ 5838 1
5 NGC 1325 EmG 03 24 25.5769895640 -21 32 38.626241964   12.28 11.55 11.13 11.6 ~ 165 0
6 ESO 358-5 GiG 03 27 16.61 -33 29 10.9   14.69   13.69 14.3 ~ 42 0
7 NGC 1385 EmG 03 37 28.323 -24 30 04.60 11.28 11.50 10.94 10.45 11.7 ~ 272 2
8 IC 342 SBG 03 46 48.514 +68 05 45.98   10.5       ~ 1517 1
9 NGC 1493 Sy2 03 57 27.4270810416 -46 12 38.513195316   11.88   11.01 11.6 ~ 133 0
10 NGC 2082 GiG 05 41 51.0901098120 -64 18 03.828857148   12.79   11.45 11.6 ~ 96 0
11 ESO 205-7 AG? 05 54 14.6678912760 -51 58 35.299088436   15.26   13.68   ~ 24 0
12 NGC 2139 EmG 06 01 07.963 -23 40 20.35   12.10 11.71 11.28 12.1 ~ 152 0
13 UGC 3574 GiP 06 53 10.3954201680 +57 10 40.154257452   13.9       ~ 62 0
14 NGC 2552 AG? 08 19 20.5355420472 +50 00 34.590204468 13.44 13.00 12.56     ~ 266 1
15 NGC 2805 GiP 09 20 20.3891233968 +64 06 10.716485004   11.9       ~ 214 1
16 NGC 3177 AGN 10 16 34.1454628296 +21 07 23.000346984   12.8       ~ 146 0
17 NGC 3277 Sy2 10 32 55.4484213912 +28 30 42.279280956 12.74 12.50 11.68     ~ 140 1
18 NGC 3346 EmG 10 43 38.9309584368 +14 52 18.437883960   12.80       ~ 183 0
19 NGC 3423 AGN 10 51 14.3245691976 +05 50 24.158965920   12.1       ~ 176 0
20 NGC 3455 GiP 10 54 31.0921117824 +17 17 04.985473704   13.1       ~ 163 0
21 NGC 3445 GiP 10 54 35.5131399552 +56 59 26.919652956 12.61 12.90 12.55     ~ 131 1
22 APG 24 G 10 54 40.1 +56 59 11           ~ 80 0
23 UGC 6983 GiC 11 59 08.734 +52 42 28.03   14.5       ~ 173 0
24 NGC 4030 GiP 12 00 23.6102390784 -01 06 00.197099136   11.42   10.3 10.4 ~ 340 1
25 UGC 7546 GiP 12 26 47.2270744440 +08 53 04.479254880   14.4       ~ 181 0
26 NGC 4449 EmG 12 28 11.118 +44 05 36.81 10.11 9.98 9.64 9.45   ~ 1125 1
27 NGC 4540 GiG 12 34 50.8741239840 +15 33 06.116283900   12.5       ~ 195 1
28 NGC 4618 GiP 12 41 32.8976471760 +41 09 03.185175528 11.03 11.22 10.78     ~ 329 2
29 NGC 4625 GiP 12 41 52.7121819576 +41 16 26.115765780 12.74 12.92 12.35     ~ 364 2
30 NGC 4701 GiG 12 49 11.5931072112 +03 23 19.389227964   13.1       ~ 170 0
31 NGC 4775 EmG 12 53 45.707 -06 37 19.73   12.3   11.19 12.0 ~ 158 0
32 NGC 4806 AG? 12 56 12.3990039936 -29 30 10.005678108   13.44   12.52   ~ 64 0
33 NGC 4980 Sy2 13 09 10.082 -28 38 30.44   13.53   12.75 13.6 ~ 68 0
34 NGC 5068 AG? 13 18 54.807 -21 02 20.76 11.24 10.53 10.01 9.78 10.1 ~ 292 0
35 NGC 5188 GiG 13 31 28.293 -34 47 40.10   12.68 11.85 16.89   ~ 84 0
36 NGC 5377 AGN 13 56 16.6722507720 +47 14 08.568249072   12.39 11.46 10.87 10.25 ~ 230 1
37 NGC 5585 GiG 14 19 48.204 +56 43 44.58   11.73 11.216 11.12 10.123 ~ 430 0
38 NGC 5668 AG? 14 33 24.3419973936 +04 27 01.650790800   12.7       ~ 217 0
39 NGC 5806 AGN 15 00 00.4088018736 +01 53 28.779594792   12.40 11.70 10.94 11.6 ~ 282 1
40 NGC 5964 EmG 15 37 36.2103407496 +05 58 26.360661972   12.45 11.82 11.48 10.89 ~ 126 0
41 ESO 138-10 GiG 16 59 02.952 -60 12 57.67   11.57   10.52 10.7 ~ 68 0
42 NGC 6384 AG? 17 32 24.2848390896 +07 03 37.531624968   13.2       ~ 304 0
43 NGC 6509 GiG 17 59 25.3151920152 +06 17 12.863588496   13.4       ~ 68 0
44 NGC 7421 EmG 22 56 54.3533970816 -37 20 50.437978152 12.61 12.64 11.93 11.71 12.1 ~ 123 1
45 NGC 7690 AG? 23 33 02.5954925352 -51 41 54.018353580   12.93 12.01 12.19 12.6 ~ 69 0
46 UGC 12732 GiP 23 40 39.86 +26 14 11.1   14.5       ~ 140 0

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