2006MNRAS.370..828F


Query : 2006MNRAS.370..828F

2006MNRAS.370..828F - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 370, 828-836 (2006/August-1)

A principal component analysis approach to the star formation history of elliptical galaxies in compact groups.

FERRERAS I., PASQUALI A., DE CARVALHO R.R., DE LA ROSA I.G. and LAHAV O.

Abstract (from CDS):

Environmental differences in the stellar populations of early-type galaxies are explored using principal component analysis (PCA), focusing on differences between elliptical galaxies in Hickson Compact Groups (HCGs) and in the field. The method is model-independent and purely relies on variations between the observed spectra. The projections (PC1, PC2) of the observed spectra on the first and second principal components reveal a difference with respect to environment, with a wider range in PC1 and PC2 in the group sample. We define a spectral parameter (ζ ≡ 0.36PC1-PC2) which simplifies this result to a single number: field galaxies have a very similar value of ζ, whereas HCG galaxies span a wide range in this parameter. The segregation is found regardless of the way the input spectral energy distributions (SEDs) are presented to PCA (i.e. changing the spectral range; using uncalibrated data; subtracting the continuum or masking the SED to include only the Lick spectral regions). Simple models are applied to give physical meaning to the PCs. We obtain a strong correlation between the values of ζ and the mass fraction in younger stars, so that some group galaxies present a higher fraction of them, implying a more complex star formation history in groups. Regarding `dynamically related' observables such as a4 or velocity dispersion, we find a correlation with PC3, but not with either PC1 or PC2. PCA is more sensitive than other methods based on a direct analysis of observables such as the structure of the surface brightness profile or the equivalent width of absorption lines. The latter do not reveal any significant variation between field and compact group galaxies. Our results imply that the presence of young stars only amounts to a fraction of a per cent in its contribution to the total variance, reflecting the power of PCA as a tool to extract small variations in the spectra from unresolved stellar populations.

Abstract Copyright: 2006 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2006 RAS

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: formation - galaxies: stellar content

Simbad objects: 37

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Number of rows : 37
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 M 32 GiG 00 42 41.82480 +40 51 54.6120 9.51 9.03 8.08     ~ 2154 2
2 NGC 529 GiG 01 25 40.2853500672 +34 42 46.858807800   13.1   11.68   ~ 101 0
3 NGC 584 Sy2 01 31 20.7231919800 -06 52 04.770287472 11.93 11.44 10.48     ~ 402 2
4 NGC 636 EmG 01 39 06.5293238064 -07 30 45.475975296   12.5       ~ 190 0
5 MCG-01-06-022 GiG 01 59 52.2624761136 -07 05 12.753973320   14.89   15.75   ~ 41 0
6 UGC 1617 GiG 02 07 34.1164040136 +02 06 54.823402476   15.1   13.41   ~ 43 0
7 UGC 1620 G 02 07 39.7614506808 +02 08 58.877224152   14.91   13.34   ~ 44 0
8 NGC 821 AG? 02 08 21.1358498040 +10 59 41.832436704   12.210 11.310 10.739 9.744 ~ 572 0
9 MCG-02-07-073 GiG 02 42 38.2975281144 -12 25 16.057616304   14.51   12.85   ~ 49 0
10 LEDA 15141 EmG 04 27 19.9727502672 -10 19 34.139342964   16.24   15.10   ~ 25 0
11 NGC 1700 EmG 04 56 56.3160873072 -04 51 56.794713228   12   11.14   ~ 348 1
12 MCG-03-13-053 G 05 01 45.2218312392 -15 26 55.613837400   14.72   13.23   ~ 36 0
13 HD 289002 * 06 45 13.3725491952 +02 08 14.685250596 10.06 10.62 10.44     B1 259 0
14 NGC 2300 AG? 07 32 20.486 +85 42 31.90   12.2       ~ 335 0
15 MCG+05-22-018 AGN 09 13 34.0222370040 +30 02 23.333922168   17.01   15.97   ~ 45 0
16 NGC 2783 AGN 09 13 39.4766036016 +29 59 34.601211960   13.9   12.05   ~ 130 1
17 MCG-01-25-008 GiG 09 38 53.471 -04 50 55.32   14.09   12.18   ~ 62 0
18 NGC 3193 GiP 10 18 24.884 +21 53 38.32 12.29 11.83 10.88 12.19   ~ 289 1
19 MCG+03-27-005 AGN 10 22 07.1132893872 +17 50 17.174669568   16.83   15.08   ~ 28 0
20 MCG+03-27-007 AGN 10 22 12.6108450432 +17 51 34.700123808   16.81   15.17   ~ 25 0
21 Feige 34 HS* 10 39 36.7358839104 +43 06 09.212615280 9.613 10.91 11.14 11.319 11.464 sdOp 680 0
22 NGC 3377 GiP 10 47 42.400 +13 59 08.30 11.55 11.24 10.38     ~ 775 1
23 M 105 LIN 10 47 49.600 +12 34 53.87   10.56 9.76 9.12 8.18 ~ 1463 0
24 NGC 3651 EmG 11 22 26.3472323376 +24 17 56.610074328   14.6   12.68   ~ 48 0
25 NGC 3750 LIN 11 37 51.635 +21 58 27.20   15.2   13.52   ~ 49 1
26 NGC 3751 GiC 11 37 53.8568221128 +21 56 11.333621688   15.23   14.07   ~ 34 1
27 IC 736 GiG 11 48 20.1140766552 +12 42 59.635098360   15.3   14.22   ~ 50 0
28 M 89 LIN 12 35 39.80733343 +12 33 22.8308657 11.29 10.73 9.75     ~ 995 2
29 M 60 GiP 12 43 39.9680 +11 33 09.696   10.3       ~ 1348 1
30 NGC 4697 GiG 12 48 35.8981498824 -05 48 02.482374564   10.97   9.83   ~ 859 0
31 NGC 4761 BiC 12 53 05.6960048016 -09 12 14.579980632   13.79   11.25   ~ 86 1
32 HZ 44 HS* 13 23 35.2629445608 +36 07 59.544140304 10.186 11.42 11.65 12.00 11.995 sdBN0VIIHe28 419 0
33 NGC 5354 LIN 13 53 26.7262413240 +40 18 09.928163700   12.3   10.64   ~ 158 0
34 NGC 7550 LIN 23 15 16.0606 +18 57 41.284   13.9   11.85   ~ 126 1
35 NGC 7619 GiG 23 20 14.524 +08 12 22.63   12.7       ~ 449 0
36 NGC 7675 GiG 23 28 05.9207591784 +08 46 06.691000476   14.8   13.20   ~ 61 1
37 IC 5357 GiG 23 47 23.0010862728 -02 18 02.057603256   14.27   12.75   ~ 59 0

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