1. H [CSC]i[/CSC] in Four Star-forming Low-Luminosity E/S0 and S0 Galaxies
- Author
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Elaine M. Sadler, Thomas A. Oosterloo, Raffaella Morganti, and Amanda Karakas
- Subjects
Physics ,Stars ,Stellar population ,Space and Planetary Science ,Star formation ,Morphological type ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Star (graph theory) ,Accretion (astrophysics) ,Galaxy ,Luminosity - Abstract
We present HI data cubes of four low-luminosity early-type galaxies which are currently forming stars. These galaxies have absolute magnitudes in the range M_B=-17.9 to -19.9 (H_o=50 km/s/Mpc). Their HI masses range between a few times 10^8 and a few times 10^9 M_sun and the corresponding values for M_HI/L_B are between 0.07 and 0.42, so these systems are HI rich for their morphological type. In all four galaxies, the HI is strongly centrally concentrated with high central HI surface densities, in contrast to what is typically observed in more luminous early-type galaxies. In two galaxies (NGC 802 and ESO 118-G34), the kinematics of the HI suggests that the gas is in a strongly warped disk, which we take as evidence for recent accretion of HI. In the other two galaxies (NGC 2328 and ESO 027-G21) the HI must have been part of the systems for a considerable time. The HI properties of low-luminosity early-type galaxies appear to be systematically different from those of many more luminous early-type galaxies, and we suggest that these differences are due to a different evolution of the two classes. The star formation history of these galaxies remains unclear. Their UBV colours and Halpha emission-line strengths are consistent with having formed stars at a slowly-declining rate for most of the past 10^10 years. However, the current data do not rule out a small burst of recent star formation overlaid on an older stellar population.
- Published
- 2000
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