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2010MNRAS.409..500O - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 409, 500-514 (2010/December-1)
Early-type galaxies in different environments: an HI view.
OOSTERLOO T., MORGANTI R., CROCKER A., JUETTE E., CAPPELLARI M., DE ZEEUW T., KRAJNOVIC D., McDERMID R., KUNTSCHNER H., SARZI M. and WEIJMANS A.-M.
Abstract (from CDS):
The HI properties of SAURON early-type galaxies strongly depend on environment. For detection limits of a few times 106 M☉, HI is detected in about 2/3 of the field galaxies, while <10 per cent of the Virgo objects are detected. In about half of the detections, the HI forms a regularly rotating disc or ring. In many galaxies unsettled tails and clouds are seen. All HI discs have counterparts of ionized gas, and inner HI discs are also detected in molecular gas. The cold interstellar medium (ISM) in the central regions is dominated by molecular gas . Assuming our sample is representative, we conclude that accretion of HI is very common for field early-type galaxies, but the amount of material involved is usually small and the effects on the host galaxy are, at most, subtle. Cluster galaxies appear not to accrete Hi, or the accreted material gets removed quickly by environmental effects. The relation between HI and stellar population is complex. The few galaxies with a significant young sub-population all have inner gas discs, but for the remaining galaxies there is no trend between stellar population and HI properties. A number of early-type galaxies are very gas rich, but only have an old population. The stellar populations of field galaxies are typically younger than those in Virgo. This is likely related to differences in accretion history. There is no obvious overall relation between gas HI content and global dynamical characteristics except that the fastest rotators all have an HI disc. This confirms that if fast and slow rotators are the result of different evolution paths, this is not strongly reflected in the current HI content. In about 50 per cent of the galaxies we detect a central radio continuum source. In many objects this emission is from a low-luminosity active galactic nucleus (AGN), and in some it is consistent with the observed star formation. Galaxies with HI in the central regions are more likely detected in continuum. This is due to a higher probability for star formation to occur in such galaxies and not to Hi-related AGN fuelling.
Abstract Copyright: © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS
Journal keyword(s): galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: evolution
Simbad objects: 44
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