2,080 results on '"Forbes, Duncan A."'
Search Results
202. The effects of stellar populations on galaxy scaling relations in the 6dF Galaxy Survey
- Author
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Proctor, Robert N., Lah, Philip, Forbes, Duncan A., Colless, Matthew, and Couch, Warrick
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the stellar populations in a sample of ~7000 galaxies from the 6dF Galaxy Survey (6dFGS). We derive ages and metallicities using stellar population models. We also derive dynamical masses and dynamical mass-to-light ratios by combining central velocity dispersions with global photometry in B, R and K bands. Together, these data allow to reduce the degeneracies between age, metallicity and star formation burst-strength that have limited previous studies. We find old galaxies exhibit a mass-metallicity relation with slope d[Fe/H]/dlogM = 0.25, while young galaxies show slopes consistent with zero. When we account for the effects of the mass-metallicity relation, we obtain a single, consistent relation between mass-to-light ratio and mass for old galaxies in all passbands. As we have accounted for stellar population effects, this relation must have a dynamical origin. However, we demonstrate that any simple trend between mass-to-light-ratio and mass or luminosity is inconsistent with the observations, and that a more complex relationship must exist. We find the central regions of galaxies often exhibit young stellar populations. However it is only in the lowest-mass galaxies (~10^{10} M$_{\odot}$) that these populations are evident in the global photometry. In higher-mass galaxies, young central populations have decreasing influence on the global photometry, with there being no discernible impact in galaxies more massive than ~2x10^{11} M$_{\odot}$. We conclude that the young stellar populations detected in spectroscopic studies are generally centrally concentrated, and that there is an upper limit on the mass of star-forming events in massive galaxies. These results have ramifications for mass-to-light ratios estimated from photometric observations., Comment: 18 pages, Accepted form publication in MNRAS. Replaced after proofing modifications
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- 2008
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203. A 2dF spectroscopic study of globular clusters in NGC 5128: Probing the formation history of the nearest giant Elliptical
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Beasley, Michael, Bridges, Terry, Peng, Eric, Harris, William E., Harris, Gretchen L. H., Forbes, Duncan A., and Mackie, Glen
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have performed a spectroscopic study of globular clusters (GCs) in the giant elliptical NGC 5128 using the 2dF facility at the Anglo-Australian telescope. We obtained integrated optical spectra for a total of 254 GCs, 79 of which are newly confirmed on the basis of their radial velocities and spectra. In addition, we obtained an integrated spectrum of the galaxy starlight along the southern major axis. We derive an empirical metallicity distribution function (MDF) for 207 GCs (~14 of the estimated total GC system) based upon Milky Way GCs. This MDF is multimodal at high statistical significance with peaks at [Z/H]~-1.3 and -0.5. A comparison between the GC MDF and that of the stellar halo at 20 kpc (~4 Reff) reveals close coincidence at the metal-rich ends of the distributions. However, an inner 8 kpc stellar MDF shows a clear excess of metal-rich stars when compared to the GCs. We compare a higher S/N subsample (147 GCs) with two stellar population models which include non-solar abundance ratio corrections. The vast majority of our sample (~90%) appears old, with ages similar to the Milky Way GC system. There is evidence for a population of intermediate-age (~4-8 Gy) GCs (<15% of the sample) which are on average more metal-rich than the old GCs. We also identify at least one younger cluster (~1-2 Gy) in the central regions of the galaxy. Our observations are consistent with a picture where NGC 5128 has undergone at least two mergers and/or interactions involving star formation and limited GC formation since z=1, however the effect of non-canonical hot stellar populations on the integrated spectra of GCs remains an outstanding uncertainty in our GC age estimates., Comment: 17 figures, some long tables
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- 2008
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204. The early-type galaxies NGC 1407 and NGC 1400 - I: spatially resolved radial kinematics and surface photometry
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Spolaor, Max, Forbes, Duncan A., Hau, George K. T., Proctor, Robert N., and Brough, Sarah
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Astrophysics - Abstract
This is the first paper of a series focused on investigating the star formation and evolutionary history of the two early-type galaxies NGC 1407 and NGC 1400. They are the two brightest galaxies of the NGC 1407 (or Eridanus-A) group, one of the 60 groups studied as part of the Group Evolution Multi-wavelength Study (GEMS). Here we present new high signal-to-noise long-slit spectroscopic data obtained at the ESO 3.6m telescope and high-resolution multi-band imaging data from the HST/ACS and wide-field imaging from Subaru Suprime-Cam. We spatially resolved integrated spectra out to 0.6 (NGC 1407) and 1.3 (NGC 1400) effective radii. The radial profiles of the kinematic parameters v(rot), sigma, h3 and h4 are measured. The surface brightness profiles are fitted to different galaxy light models and the colour distributions analysed. The multi-band images are modelled to derive isophotal shape parameters and residual galaxy images. The parameters from the surface brightness profile fitting are used to estimate the mass of the possible central supermassive black hole in NGC 1407. The galaxies are found to be rotationally supported and to have a flat core in the surface brightness profiles. Elliptical isophotes are observed at all radii and no fine structures are detected in the residual galaxy images. From our results we can also discard a possible interaction between NGC 1400, NGC 1407 and the group intergalactic medium. We estimate a mass of 1.03x10^9 M(sun) for the supermassive black hole in NGC 1407 galaxy., Comment: 11 pages, 6 tables, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2008
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205. The early-type galaxies NGC 1407 and NGC 1400 - II: star formation and chemical evolutionary history
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Spolaor, Max, Forbes, Duncan A., Proctor, Robert N., Hau, George K. T., and Brough, Sarah
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a possible star formation and chemical evolutionary history for two early-type galaxies NGC 1407 and NGC 1400. They are the two brightest galaxies of the NGC 1407 (or Eridanus-A) group, one of the 60 groups studied as part of the Group Evolution Multi-wavelength Study (GEMS). Our analysis is based on new high signal-to-noise spatially resolved integrated spectra obtained at the ESO 3.6m telescope, out to 0.6 (NGC 1407) and 1.3 (NGC 1400) effective radii. Using Lick/IDS indices we estimate luminosity-weighted ages, metallicities and $\alpha$-element abundance ratios. Colour radial distributions from HST/ACS and Subaru Suprime-Cam multi-band wide-field imaging are compared to colours predicted from spectroscopically determinated ages and metallicities using single stellar population models. The galaxies formed over half of their mass in a single short-lived burst of star formation (> 100 M(sun)/year) at redshift z>5. This likely involved an outside-in mechanism with supernova-driven galactic winds, as suggested by the flatness of the alpha-element radial profiles and the strong negative metallicity gradients. Our results support the predictions of the revised version of the monolithic collapse model for galaxy formation and evolution. We speculate that, since formation the galaxies have evolved quiescently and that we are witnessing the first infall of NGC 1400 in the group., Comment: 14 pages, 9 tables, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2008
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206. Gemini/GMOS Spectroscopy of the Spheroid and Globular Cluster System of NGC 3923
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Norris, Mark A., Sharples, Ray M., Bridges, Terry, Gebhardt, Karl, Forbes, Duncan A., Proctor, Robert, Faifer, Favio Raul, Forte, Juan Carlos, Beasley, Michael A., Zepf, Stephen E., and Hanes, David A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a technique to extract ultra-deep diffuse-light spectra from the standard multi-object spectroscopic observations used to investigate extragalactic globular cluster (GC) systems. This technique allows a clean extraction of the spectrum of the host galaxy diffuse light from the same slitlets as the GC targets. We show the utility of the method for investigating the kinematics and stellar populations of galaxies at radii much greater than usually probed in longslit studies, at no additional expense in terms of telescope time. To demonstrate this technique we present Gemini/GMOS spectroscopy of 29 GCs associated with the elliptical galaxy NGC 3923. We compare the measured stellar population parameters of the GC system with those of the spheroid of NGC 3923 at the same projected radii, and find the GCs to have old ages (> 10 Gyr), [alpha/Fe]~0.3 and a range of metallicities running from [Z/H] = -1.8 to +0.35. The diffuse light of the galaxy is found to have ages, metallicities and [alpha/Fe] abundance ratios indistinguishable from those of the red GCs., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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207. The connection between globular cluster systems and their host galaxy and environment: a case study of the isolated elliptical NGC 821
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Spitler, Lee R., Forbes, Duncan A., Strader, Jay, Brodie, Jean P., and Gallagher III, Jay S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In an effort to probe the globular cluster (GC) system of an isolated elliptical galaxy, a comprehensive analysis of the NGC 821 GC system was performed. New imaging from the WIYN Mini-Mosaic imager, supplemented with Hubbl e Space Telescope (HST) WFPC2 images reveals a GC system similar to those found in counterpart ellipticals located in high-density environments. To put these results into the context of galaxy formation, a robustly-determined census of GC systems is presented and analysed for galaxies spanning a wide range of masses (> M_star), morphologies and environments. Results from this meta-study: (1) confirm previous findings that the number of GCs normalized by host galaxy stellar mass increases with host stellar mass. Spiral galaxies in the sample show smaller relative GC numbers than those of massive ellipticals, suggesting the GC systems of massive ellipticals were not formed from major spiral-spiral mergers; (2) indicate that GC system numbers per unit galaxy baryon mass increases with host baryon mass and that GC formation efficiency may not be universal as previously thought; (3) suggest previously reported trends with environment may be incorrect due to sample bias or the use of galaxy stellar masses to normalize GC numbers. Thus claims for environmentally dependent GC formation efficiencies should be revisited; (4) in combination with weak-lensing halo mass estimates, suggest that GCs formed in direct proportion to the halo mass; (5) are consistent with theoretical predictions whereby the local epoch of re-ionization did not vary significantly with environment or host galaxy type., Comment: Published in MNRAS. This version matches the published article
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- 2007
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208. Is NGC 3108 transforming itself from an early to late type galaxy -- an astronomical hermaphrodite?
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Hau, George, Bower, Richard, Kilborn, Virginia, Forbes, Duncan, Balogh, Michael, and Oosterloo, Tom
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A common feature of hierarchical galaxy formation models is the process of "inverse" morphological transformation: a bulge dominated galaxy accretes a gas disk, dramatically reducing the system's bulge-to-disk mass ratio. During their formation, present day galaxies may execute many such cycles across the Hubble diagram. A good candidate for such a "hermaphrodite" galaxy is NGC 3108: a dust-lane early-type galaxy which has a large amount of HI gas distributed in a large scale disk. We present narrow band H_alpha and R-band imaging, and compare the results with the HI distribution. The emission is in two components: a nuclear bar and an extended disk component which coincides with the HI distribution. This suggests that a stellar disk is currently being formed out of the HI gas. The spatial distributions of the H_alpha and HI emission and the HII regions are consistent with a barred spiral structure, extending some 20 kpc in radius. We measure an extinction- corrected SFR of 0.42 Msun/yr. The luminosity function of the HII regions is similar to other spiral galaxies, with a power law index of -2.1, suggesting that the star formation mechanism is similar to other spiral galaxies. We measured the current disk mass and find that it is too massive to have been formed by the current SFR over the last few Gyr. It is likely that the SFR in NGC 3108 was higher in the past. With the current SFR, the disk in NGC 3108 will grow to be ~6.2x10^9 Msun in stellar mass within the next 5.5 Gyr. While this is substantial, the disk will be insignificant compared with the large bulge mass: the final stellar mass disk-to-bulge ratio will be ~0.02. NGC 3108 will fail to transform into anything resembling a spiral without a boost in the SFR and additional supply of gas., Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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209. Structural parameters for globular clusters in NGC 5128. III. ACS surface-brightness profiles and model fits
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McLaughlin, Dean E., Barmby, Pauline, Harris, William E., Forbes, Duncan A., and Harris, Gretchen L. H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present internal surface-brightness profiles, based on HST/ACS imaging in the F606W bandpass, for 131 globular cluster (GC) candidates with luminosities 10^4 - 3 x 10^6 solar, in the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 5128. Several structural models are fit to the profile of each cluster and combined with mass-to-light ratios from population-synthesis models, to derive a catalogue of fundamental structural and dynamical parameters parallel in form to the catalogues recently produced by McLaughlin & van der Marel and Barmby et al. for GCs and massive young star clusters in Local Group galaxies. As part of this, we provide corrected and extended parameter estimates for another 18 clusters in NGC 5128, which we observed previously. We show that, like GCs in the Milky Way and some of its satellites, the majority of globulars in NGC 5128 are well fit by isotropic Wilson models, which have intrinsically more distended envelope structures than the standard King lowered isothermal spheres. We use our models to predict internal velocity dispersions for every cluster in our sample. These predictions agree well in general with the observed dispersions in a small number of clusters for which spectroscopic data are available. In a subsequent paper, we use these results to investigate scaling relations for GCs in NGC 5128., Comment: MNRAS, in press. 28 pages. Full data tables available at http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~dem/clusters.html
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- 2007
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210. HI Mapping of Galaxies in Six GEMS Groups
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Kern, Katie, Kilborn, Virginia, Forbes, Duncan, and Koribalski, Baerbel
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Here we present Australia Telescope Compact Array HI maps of 16 HI sources in six Group Evolution Multiwavelength Study (GEMS) groups that were previously observed with the Parkes telescope. The higher spatial resolution of the ATCA allows us to clearly identify the optical counterparts for the first time -- most being associated with low surface brightness late-type galaxies. New integrated HI maps and velocity fields for each source are presented. We find several interacting systems; one of which contains three galaxies within a common HI envelope. Extended HI structures in the sample are more consistent with tidal effects than ram pressure stripping. We identify two HI detections with previously uncatalogued optical galaxies, and add a total of six newly identified group members to the NGC 3923, 5044 and 7144 groups., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted by MNRAS
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- 2007
211. Keck spectroscopy of globular clusters in the spiral galaxy NGC 2683
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Proctor, Robert N., Forbes, Duncan A., Brodie, Jean P., and Strader, Jay
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyse Keck spectra of 24 candidate globular clusters (GCs) associated with the spiral galaxy NGC 2683. We identify 19 bona fide GCs based on their recession velocities, of which 15 were suitable for stellar population analysis. Age and metallicity determinations reveal old ages in 14 out of 15 GCs. These old GCs exhibit age and metallicity distributions similar to that of the Milky Way GC system. One GC in NGC 2683 was found to exhibit an age of ~3 Gyr. The age, metallicity and alpha-element abundance of this centrally located GC are remarkably similar to the values found for the galactic centre itself, providing further evidence for a recent star formation event in NGC 2683., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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212. The Age, Metallicity and Alpha-Element Abundance of Galactic Globular Clusters from Single Stellar Population Models
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Mendel, Jon T., Proctor, Robert N., and Forbes, Duncan A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Establishing the reliability with which stellar population parameters can be measured is vital to extragalactic astronomy. Galactic GCs provide an excellent medium in which to test the consistency of Single Stellar Population (SSP) models as they should be our best analogue to a homogeneous (single) stellar population. Here we present age, metallicity and $\alpha$-element abundance measurements for 48 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) as determined from integrated spectra using Lick indices and SSP models from Thomas, Maraston & Korn, Lee & Worthey and Vazdekis et al. By comparing our new measurements to independent determinations we are able to assess the ability of these SSPs to derive consistent results -- a key requirement before application to heterogeneous stellar populations like galaxies. We find that metallicity determinations are extremely robust, showing good agreement for all models examined here, including a range of enhancement methods. Ages and $\alpha$-element abundances are accurate for a subset of our models, with the caveat that the range of these parameters in Galactic GCs is limited. We are able to show that the application of published Lick index response functions to models with fixed abundance ratios allows us to measure reasonable $\alpha$-element abundances from a variety of models. We also examine the age-metallicity and [$\alpha$/Fe]-metallicity relations predicted by SSP models, and characterise the possible effects of varied model horizontal branch morphology on our overall results., Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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213. The Kinematics and Dynamics of the Globular Clusters and the Planetary Nebulae of NGC 5128
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Woodley, Kristin A., Harris, William E., Beasley, Michael A., Peng, Eric W., Bridges, Terry J., Forbes, Duncan A., and Harris, Gretchen L. H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A new kinematic and dynamic study of the halo of the giant elliptical galaxy, NGC 5128, is presented. From a spectroscopically confirmed sample of 340 globular clusters and 780 planetary nebulae, the rotation amplitude, rotation axis, velocity dispersion, and the total dynamical mass are determined for the halo of NGC 5128. The globular cluster kinematics were searched for both radial dependence and metallicity dependence by subdividing the globular cluster sample into 158 metal-rich ([Fe/H] > -1.0) and 178 metal-poor ([Fe/H] < -1.0) globular clusters. Our results show the kinematics of the metal-rich and metal-poor subpopulations are quite similar. The kinematics are compared to the planetary nebula population where differences are apparent in the outer regions of the halo. The total mass of NGC 5128 is found using the Tracer Mass estimator (Evans et al. 2003), to determine the mass supported by internal random motions, and the spherical component of the Jeans equation to determine the mass supported by rotation. We find a total mass of (1.0+/-0.2) x 10^(12) Msun from the planetary nebulae data out to a projected radius of 90 kpc and (1.3+/-0.5) x 10^(12) Msun from the globular clusters out to a projected radius of 50 kpc. Lastly, we present a new and homogeneous catalog of known globular clusters in NGC 5128. This catalog combines all previous definitive cluster identifications from radial velocity studies and HST imaging studies, as well as 80 new globular clusters from a study of M.A. Beasley et al. (2007, in preparation)., Comment: Accepted in the Astronomical Journal,52 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables - Changes made to Table 1 from originally submitted 0704.1189
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- 2007
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214. The spatially resolved stellar populations of isolated early-type galaxies
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Reda, Fatma M., Proctor, Robert N., Forbes, Duncan A., Hau, George K. T., and Larsen, Søren S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present radial stellar population parameters for a subsample of 12 galaxies from the 36 isolated early-type galaxies of Reda et al. Using new long-slit spectra, central values and radial gradients for the stellar age, metallicity [Z/H] and alpha-element abundance [E/Fe] are measured. Similarly, the central stellar population parameters are derived for a further 5 isolated early-type galaxies using their Lick indices from the literature. On average, the seventeen isolated galaxies have mean central [Z/H]o and [E/Fe]o of 0.29+/-0.03 and 0.17+/-0.03 respectively and span a wide range of ages from 1.7 to 15 Gyrs. We find that isolated galaxies follow similar scaling relations between central stellar population parameters and galaxy velocity dispersion to their counterparts in high density environments. However, we note a tendency for isolated galaxies to have slightly younger ages, higher [Z/H] and lower [E/Fe]. Such properties are qualitatively consistent with the expectation of an extended star formation history for galaxies in lower density environments. Generally we measure constant age and [E/Fe] radial gradients. We find that the age gradients anti-correlate with the central galaxy age. Metallicity gradients range from near zero to strongly negative. For our high mass galaxies metallicity gradients are shallower with increasing mass. Such behaviour is not predicted in dissipational collapse models but might be expected in multiple mergers. The metallicity gradients correlate with the central age and metallicity, as well as to the age gradients. In conclusion, our stellar population data for isolated galaxies are more compatible with an extended merger/accretion history than early dissipative collapse., Comment: The paper contains 8 figures and 5 tables. Accepted for publication in the MNRAS
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- 2007
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215. Stellar populations of Globular Clusters in the Elliptical galaxy NGC1407
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Cenarro, A. Javier, Beasley, Michael A., Strader, Jay, Brodie, Jean P., and Forbes, Duncan A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-quality, Keck spectroscopic data for a sample of 20 globular clusters (GCs) in the massive E0 galaxy NGC1407. A subset of twenty line-strength indices of the Lick/IDS system have been measured for both the GC system and the central integrated star-light of the galaxy. Ages, metallicities and [alpha/Fe] ratios have been derived using several different approaches. The majority GCs in NGC1407 studied are old, follow a tight metallicity sequence reaching values slightly above solar, and exhibit mean [alpha/Fe] ratios of ~ 0.3 dex. In addition, three GCs are formally derived to be young (~ 4 Gyr), but we argue that they are actually old GCs hosting blue horizontal branches. We report, for the first time, evidence for the existence of two chemically-distinct subpopulations of metal-rich (MR) GCs. We find some MR GCs exhibit significantly larger [Mg/Fe] and [C/Fe] ratios. Different star formation time-scales are proposed to explain the correlation between Mg and C abundances. We also find striking CN overabundances over the entire GC metallicity range. Interestingly, the behavior of C and N in metal-poor (MP) GCs clearly deviates from the one in MR GCs. In particular, for MR GCs, N increases dramatically while C essentially saturates. This may be interpreted as a consequence of the increasing importance of the CNO cycle with increasing metallicity., Comment: 53 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal
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- 2007
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216. The WiggleZ project: AAOmega and Dark Energy
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Glazebrook, Karl, Blake, Chris, Couch, Warrick, Forbes, Duncan, Drinkwater, Michael, Jurek, Russell, Pimbblet, Kevin, Madore, Barry, Martin, Chris, Small, Todd, Forster, Karl, Colless, Matthew, Sharp, Rob, Croom, Scott, Woods, David, Pracy, Michael, Gilbank, David, Yee, Howard, and Gladders, Mike
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the `WiggleZ' spectroscopic survey of 280,000 star-forming galaxies selected from a combination of GALEX ultra-violet and SDSS + RCS2 optical imaging. The fundamental goal is a detection of the baryonic acoustic oscillations in galaxy clustering at high-redshift (0.5 < z < 1) and a precise measurement of the equation of state of dark energy from this purely geometric and robust method. The survey has already started on the 3.9m Anglo-Australian Telescope using the AAOmega spectrograph, and planned to complete during 2009. The WWW page for the survey can be found at http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/wigglez, Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the Durham "Cosmic Frontiers" ASP conference eds. Metcalfe & Shanks, 8 pages, 5 figures, (Version 2: updated May 2007 with final analysis of data through to Nov 2006.)
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- 2007
217. Damp Mergers: Recent Gaseous Mergers without Significant Globular Cluster Formation?
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Forbes, Duncan A., Proctor, Robert, Strader, Jay, and Brodie, Jean P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Here we test the idea that new globular clusters (GCs) are formed in the same gaseous ("wet") mergers or interactions that give rise to the young stellar populations seen in the central regions of many early-type galaxies. We compare mean GC colors with the age of the central galaxy starburst. The red GC subpopulation reveals remarkably constant mean colors independent of galaxy age. A scenario in which the red GC subpopulation is a combination of old and new GCs (formed in the same event as the central galaxy starburst) can not be ruled out; although this would require an age-metallicity relation for the newly formed GCs that is steeper than the Galactic relation. However, the data are also well described by a scenario in which most red GCs are old, and few, if any, are formed in recent gaseous mergers. This is consistent with the old ages inferred from some spectroscopic studies of GCs in external systems. The event that induced the central galaxy starburst may have therefore involved insufficient gas mass for significant GC formation. We term such gas-poor events "damp" mergers., Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, ApJ accepted
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- 2006
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218. Structural Parameters for Globular Clusters in NGC 5128. II: HST/ACS Imaging and New Clusters
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Harris, William E., Harris, Gretchen L. H., Barmby, Pauline, McLaughlin, Dean E., and Forbes, Duncan
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first results from an imaging program with the ACS camera on HST designed to measure the structural characteristics of a wide range of globular clusters in NGC 5128, the nearest giant elliptical galaxy. From 12 ACS/WFC fields, we have measured a total of 62 previously known globular clusters and have discovered 69 new high-probability cluster candidates not found in any previous work. We present magnitudes and color indices for all of these, along with rough measurements of their effective diameters and ellipticities. The luminosity distribution of this nearly-uncontaminated sample of clusters matches well with the normal GCLF for giant elliptical galaxies, and the cluster scale size and ellipticity distributions are similar to those in the Milky Way system. The indication from this survey is that many hundreds of individual clusters remain to be found with carefully designed search techniques in the future. A very rough estimate of the total cluster population from our data suggests N_GC = 1500 in NGC 5128, over all magnitudes and within a projected radius R = 25' from the galaxy center., Comment: AASTex, 33 preprint pages including 9 Figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomical Journal, volume 132 (2006)
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- 2006
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219. Gaseous Tidal Debris found in the NGC 3783 Group
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Kilborn, Virginia A., Forbes, Duncan A., Koribalski, Baerbel S., Brough, Sarah, and Kern, Katie
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have conducted wide-field HI mapping of a ~5.5 x 5.5 degree region surrounding the NGC 3783 galaxy group, to an HI mass limit of ~4 x 10^8 Msun. The observations were made using the multibeam system on the Parkes 64-m radiotelescope, as part of the Galaxy Evolution Multiwavelength Study (GEMS). We find twelve HI detections in our Parkes data, four more than catalogued in HIPASS. We find two new group members, and discover an isolated region of HI gas with an HI mass of ~4 x 10^8 Msun, without a visible corresponding optical counterpart. We discuss the likelihood of this HI region being a low surface brightness galaxy, primordial gas, or a remnant of tidal debris. For the NGC 3783 group we derive a mean recession velocity of 2903 km/s, and a velocity dispersion of 190 km/s. The galaxy NGC 3783 is the nearest galaxy to the luminosity weighted centre of the group, and is at the group mean velocity. From the X-ray and dynamical state of this galaxy group, this group appears to be in the early stages of its evolution., Comment: 12 pages, MNRAS accepted: full resolution paper available at http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/~vkilborn/MF1350rv.pdf
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- 2006
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220. The U-shaped distribution of globular cluster specific frequencies in a biased globular cluster formation scenario
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Bekki, Kenji, Yahagi, Hideki, and Forbes, Duncan A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using high-resolution numerical simulations, we investigate mass- and luminosity-normalized specific frequencies (T_N and S_N, respectively) of globular cluster systems (GCSs) in order to understand the origin of the observed U-shaped relation between S_N and V-band magnitude (M_V) of their host galaxies. We adopt a biased GC formation scenario in which GC formation is truncated in galaxy halos that are virialized at a later redshift, z_trun. T_N is derived for galaxies with GCs today and converted into S_N for reasonable galaxy mass-to-light-ratios (M/L). We find that T_N depends on halo mass (M_h) in the sense that T_N can be larger in more massive halos with M_h > 10^9 M_sun, if z_trun is as high as 15. We however find that the dependence is too weak to explain the observed S_N-M_V relation and the wide range of S_N in low-mass early-type galaxies with -20.5 < M_V < -16.0 mag for a reasonable constant M/L. The M_V-dependence of S_N for the low-mass galaxies can be well reproduced, if the mass-to-light-ratio M_h/L_V \propto M_h^{\alpha}, where \alpha is as steep as -1. Based on these results, we propose that the origin of the observed U-shaped S_N-M_V relation of GCSs can be understood in terms of the bimodality in the dependence of M_h/L_V on M_h of their host galaxies. We also suggest that the observed large dispersionin S_N in low-mass galaxies is due partly to the large dispersion in T_N., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures (two color), accepted by ApJL
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- 2006
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221. X-ray observations of three young, early-type galaxies
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Sansom, A. E., O'Sullivan, E., Forbes, Duncan A., Proctor, R. N., and Davis, D. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Massive halos of hot plasma exist around some, but not all elliptical galaxies. There is evidence that this is related to the age of the galaxy. In this paper new X-ray observations are presented for three early-type galaxies that show evidence of youth, in order to investigate their X-ray components and properties. NGC 5363 and NGC 2865 were found to have X-ray emission dominated by purely discrete stellar sources. Limits are set on the mass distribution in one of the galaxies observed with XMM-Newton, NGC 4382, which contains significant hot gas. We detect the X-ray emission in NGC 4382 out to 4r$_e$. The mass-to-light ratio is consistent with a stellar origin in the inner regions but rises steadily to values indicative of some dark matter by 4r$_e$. These results are set in context with other data drawn from the literature, for galaxies with ages estimated from dynamical or spectroscopic indicators. Ages obtained from optical spectroscopy represent central luminosity weighted stellar ages. We examine the X-ray evolution with age, normalised by B and K band luminosities. Low values of Log(L$_X$/L$_B$) and Log(L$_X$/L$_K$) are found for all galaxies with ages between 1 and 4 Gyrs. Luminous X-ray emission only appears in older galaxies. This suggests that the interstellar medium is removed and then it takes several gigayears for hot gas halos to build up, following a merger. A possible mechanism for gas expulsion might be associated with feedback from an active nucleus triggered during a merger., Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 8 tables, accepted for MNRAS
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- 2006
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222. Southern GEMS Groups I: Dynamical Properties
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Brough, Sarah, Forbes, Duncan, Kilborn, Virginia, and Couch, Warrick
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Here we present an investigation of the properties of 16 nearby galaxy groups and their constituent galaxies. The groups are selected from the Group Evolution Multi-wavelength Study (GEMS) and all have X-ray as well as wide-field neutral hydrogen (HI) observations. Group membership is determined using a friends-of-friends algorithm on the positions and velocities from the 6-degree Field Galaxy Survey (6dFGS) and NASA/IPAC Extra-galactic Database (NED). For each group we derive their physical properties using this membership, including: velocity dispersions (sigma_v), virial masses (M_V), total K-band luminosities (L_K(Tot)) and early-type fractions (f_early) and present these data for the individual groups. We find that the GEMS X-ray luminosity is proportional to the group velocity dispersions and virial masses: L_X(r_500)\propto\sigma_v^{3.11\pm0.59} and L_X(r_500)\propto M_V^{1.13\pm0.27}, consistent with the predictions of self-similarity between group and clusters. We also find that M_V\propto L_K(Tot)^{2.0\pm0.9}, i.e. mass grows faster than light and that the fraction of early-type galaxies in the groups is correlated with the group X-ray luminosities and velocity dispersions. We examine the brightest group galaxies (BGGs), finding that, while the luminosity of the BGG correlates with its total group luminosity, the fraction of group luminosity contained in the BGG decreases with increasing total group luminosity. This suggests that BGGs grow by mergers at early times in group evolution while the group continues to grow by accreting infalling galaxies. (Abridged), Comment: 30 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS, Table 3 available at http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/~sbrough/landscape_table3.ps
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- 2006
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223. Globular clusters and galaxy fomation
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Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We first discuss recent progress in using the Milky Way globular cluster (GC) system as a `test-bed' for properties derived from integrated spectra and stellar population models. Standard techniques may give rise to spuriously high alpha-element ratios at low metallicities. We then discuss evidence for early epoch (z > 2) formation for most GCs in galaxies today. Recent accretions of GCs (and their host galaxy) make a small contribution but recent mergers form few if any new GCs in today's elliptical galaxies. The early formation of metal-poor GCs and the bimodality seen in GC specific frequency requires a `truncation' which may be due to reionization., Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, Globular Clusters - Guides to Galaxies conference
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- 2006
224. Radial Kinematics of Isolated Elliptical Galaxies
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Hau, George and Forbes, Duncan
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Ellipticals in very low density environments are extremely rare but hold important clues about galaxy formation and evolution. In this paper we continue our study of isolated elliptical galaxies, presenting results on the radial stellar kinematics for 13 isolated early-type galaxies. We derive radial rotation velocity, velocity dispersion and hermite terms to ~1 effective radius. We observe a dichotomy in kinematic properties similar to that in the elliptical population as a whole, where low luminosity ellipticals tend to be rotationally supported. For all galaxies the V/sigma ratio increases with radius. We find kinematically distinct cores (KDCs), or velocity substructure, in ~40% of the galaxies for which we have major axis spectra. Such a fraction is similar to that observed for ellipticals in higher density environments. Most galaxies in the sample reveal kinematic evidence for a nuclear disk. The non-relaxed kinematics in several galaxies suggests that they have undergone a merger or accretion event. Isolated ellipticals generally follow the fundamental plane defined by cluster ellipticals -- exceptions being those galaxies with evidence for young stellar populations. Overall, we find isolated ellipticals have similar kinematic properties to their counterparts in higher density environments., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepted
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- 2006
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225. Eridanus - A Supergroup in the Local Universe?
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Brough, Sarah, Forbes, Duncan, Kilborn, Virginia, Couch, Warrick, and Colless, Matthew
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We examine a possible supergroup in the direction of the Eridanus constellation using 6dF Galaxy Survey second data release (6dFGS DR2) positions and velocities together with 2MASS and HyperLEDA photometry. We perform a friends-of-friends analysis to determine which galaxies are associated with each substructure before examining the properties of the constituent galaxies. The structure is made up of three individual groups that are likely to merge to form a cluster of mass 7x10^13 Msolar. We conclude that this structure is a supergroup. We also examine the colours, morphologies and luminosities of the galaxies in the region with respect to their local projected surface density. We find that the colours of the galaxies redden with increasing density, the median luminosities are brighter with increasing environmental density and the morphologies of the galaxies show a strong morphology-density relation. The colours and luminosities of the galaxies in the supergroup are already similar to those of galaxies in clusters, however the supergroup contains more late-type galaxies, consistent with its lower projected surface density. Due to the velocity dispersion of the groups in the supergroup, which are lower than those of clusters, we conclude that the properties of the constituent galaxies are likely to be a result of merging or strangulation processes in groups outlying this structure., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2006
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226. The Group Evolution Multiwavelength Study (GEMS): the Sample and Datasets
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Forbes, Duncan A., Ponman, Trevor, Pearce, Frazer, Osmond, John, Kilborn, Virginia, Brough, Sarah, Raychaudhury, Somak, Mundell, Carole, Miles, Trevor, and Kern, Katie
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Galaxy groups have been under-studied relative to their richer counterparts -- clusters. The Group Evolution Multiwavelength Study (GEMS) aims to redress some the balance. Here we describe the GEMS sample selection and resulting sample of 60 nearby (distance < 130 Mpc) galaxy groups and our multiwavelength dataset of X-ray, optical and HI imaging. ROSAT X-ray images of each group are presented. GEMS also utilizes near-infrared imaging from the 2MASS survey and optical spectra from the 6dFGS. These observational data are complemented by mock group catalogues generated from the latest LCDM simulations with gas physics included. Existing GEMS publications are briefly highlighted as are future publication plans., Comment: Accepted for publication in PASA. Paper plus additional figures in jpg format
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- 2006
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227. Gemini/GMOS Spectra of Globular Clusters in the Virgo Giant Elliptical NGC 4649
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Pierce, Michael, Bridges, Terry, Forbes, Duncan A., Proctor, Robert, Beasley, Michael A., Gebhardt, Karl, Faifer, Favio Raul, Forte, Juan Carlos, Zepf, Stephen E., Sharples, Ray, and Hanes, David A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
NGC 4649 (M60) is one of a handful of giant Virgo ellipticals. We have obtained Gemini/GMOS spectra for 38 GCs associated with this galaxy. Applying the multi-index chi^2 minimisation technique of Proctor & Sansom (2002) with the single stellar population models of Thomas, Maraston & Korn (2004) we derive ages, metallicities and alpha-element abundance ratios. We find several young (2--3 Gyr old) super-solar metallicity GCs, while the majority are old (>10 Gyrs), spanning a range of metallicities from solar to [Z/H]=-2. At least two of these young GCs are at large projected radii of 17-20 kpc. The galaxy itself shows no obvious signs of a recent starburst, interaction or merger. A trend of decreasing alpha-element ratio with increasing metallicity is found., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figs, 6 tables, MNRAS accepted
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- 2006
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228. Bimodal Galaxies and Bimodality in Globular Cluster Systems
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Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Various galaxy properties are not continuous over a large range in mass, but rather reveal a remarkable transition or `bimodality' at a stellar mass of 3 x 10^{10} Mo. These properties include colors, stellar populations, Xray emission and mass-to-light ratios. This behavior has been interpreted as the transition from hot to cold flows by Dekel & Birnboim (2005). Here we explore whether globular cluster (GC) systems also reveal a bimodal nature with regard to this critical mass scale. Globular clusters probe star formation at early epochs in the Universe and survive subsequent galaxy mergers and accretions. We use new data from the ACS Virgo Cluster Survey (Peng etal 2005), which provides a homogeneous sample of the GC systems around one hundred Virgo early-type galaxies covering a range of five hundred in galaxy mass. Their classification of the GC color distributions is taken to examine a key quantity -- the number of GCs per unit galaxy luminosity. Below the critical mass, this quantity (called the GC specific frequency) increases dramatically in its mean value and spread. This increase may be due to regulated star formation in low mass galaxies, which in turn is due to mass loss via winds and the transition from hot to cold gas accretion flows. We also note that above the critical mass, galaxies possess two GC subpopulations (with blue and red mean colors) but below this mass, galaxies reveal an increasing proportion of single (blue) GC systems., Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2005
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229. Gemini/GMOS Spectra of Globular Clusters in the Leo Group Elliptical NGC 3379
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Pierce, Michael, Beasley, Michael A., Forbes, Duncan A., Bridges, Terry, Gebhardt, Karl, Faifer, Favio Raul, Forte, Juan Carlos, Zepf, Stephen E., Sharples, Ray, Hanes, David A., and Proctor, Robert
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have obtained Gemini/GMOS spectra for 22 GCs associated with NGC 3379. We derive ages, metallicities and alpha-element abundance ratios from simple stellar population models using the multi-index chi^2 minimisation method of Proctor & Sansom (2002). All of these GCs are found to be consistent with old ages, i.e. >10 Gyr, with a wide range of metallicities. A trend of decreasing alpha-element abundance ratio with increasing metallicity is indicated. The projected velocity dispersion of the GC system is consistent with being constant with radius. Non-parametric, isotropic models require a significant increase in the mass-to-light ratio at large radii. This result is in contrast to that of Romanowsky et al. (2003) who find a decrease in the velocity dispersion profile as determined from planetary nebulae. Our constant dispersion requires a normal sized dark halo, although without anisotropic models we cannot rigorously determine the dark halo mass. A two-sided chi^2 test over all radii, gives a 2 sigma difference between the mass profile derived from our GCs compared to the PN-derived mass model of Romanowsky et al. (2003). However, if we restrict our analysis to radii beyond one effective radius and test if the GC velocity dispersion is consistently higher, we determine a >3 sigma difference between the mass models, and hence favor the conclusion that NGC 3379 does indeed have dark matter at large radii in its halo. (abridged), Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, accepted MNRAS, 2 Notes added in proof
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- 2005
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230. An Imaging Study of the Globular Cluster Systems of NGC 1407 and NGC 1400
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Forbes, Duncan, Sanchez-Blazquez, Patricia, Phan, Anna, Brodie, Jean, Strader, Jay, and Spitler, Lee
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present wide-field Keck telescope imaging of the globular cluster (GC) systems around NGC 1407 and NGC 1400 in the Eridanus galaxy cloud. This is complemented by Hubble Space Telescope images from the Advanced Camera for Surveys of NGC 1407 and Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 images of NGC 1400. We clearly detect bimodality in the GC colour distribution of NGC 1407. The blue GC subpopulation has a mean colour of B-I = 1.61 and a relative contribution of around 40%, whereas the red subpopulation with B-I = 2.06 contributes 60% to the overall GC system. Assuming old ages, this corresponds to [Fe/H] = -1.45 and -0.19. Both subpopulations are intrinsically broad in colour (indicating a range in ages and/or metallicities), with the red subpopulation being broader than the blue. The GC colour distribution for NGC 1400 is less clear cut than for NGC 1407, however, we also find evidence for a bimodal distribution. We find the NGC 1407 red GCs to be 20% smaller in size than the blue ones. We find both GC systems to possess a GC surface density distribution which is largely constant in these inner galaxy regions. We fit isothermal-like profiles and derive GC system core radii of 9.4 kpc for NGC 1407 and 5.8 kpc for NGC 1400. For NGC 1407 we are able to separate the surface density distribution into blue and red subpopulations, giving 17.8 and 7.6 kpc respectively. Outside this central region, the radial profile of the GC surface density is similar to that of the galaxy light for NGC 1407 but it is flatter for NGC 1400. A fit to the GC luminosity function gives a distance modulus of 31.6, which is in good agreement with distances based on the Faber-Jackson relation and the Virgo infall corrected velocity., Comment: 13 pages, 20 figures, 1 table, 4 tables in the appendix (available from first author). Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Updated SBF distance value
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- 2005
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231. Galaxy Groups: Proceedings from a Swinburne University Workshop
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Kilborn, Virginia A., Bekki, Kenji, Brough, Sarah, Doyle, Marianne T., Evstigneeva, Ekaterina A., Forbes, Duncan A., Koribalski, Baerbel, Owers, Matthew S., and Power, Chris
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the proceedings from a 2-day workshop held at Swinburne University on the 24th-25th of May 2005. The workshop participants highlighted current Australian research on both theoretical and observational aspects of galaxy groups. These proceedings include short 1-page summaries of a number of the talks presented at the workshop. The talks presented ranged from reconciling N-body simulations with observations, to the HI content of galaxies in groups and the existence of ``dark galaxies''. The formation and existence of ultra-compact dwarfs in groups, and a new supergroup in Eridanus were also discussed., Comment: to be published in PASA
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- 2005
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232. On the structure of globular cluster systems in elliptical galaxies
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Bekki, Kenji and Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
It has long been known that the radial density profiles of globular cluster systems (GCSs) in elliptical galaxies vary with the total luminosities of their host galaxies. In order to elucidate the origin of this structural non-homology in GCSs, we numerically investigate the structural properties of GCSs in elliptical galaxies formed from a sequence of major dissipationless galaxy merging. We find that the radial density profiles of GCSs in elliptical galaxies become progressively flatter as the galaxies experience more major merger events. The density profiles of GCSs in ellipticals are well described as power-laws with slopes (${\alpha}_{\rm gc}$) ranging from -2.0 to -1.0. They are flatter than, and linearly proportional to, the slopes (${\alpha}_{\rm s}$) of the stellar density profiles of their host galaxies. We also find that the GCS core radii ($r_{\rm c}$) of the density profiles are larger in ellipticals that experienced more mergers. By applying a reasonable scaling relation between luminosities and sizes of galaxies to the simulation results, we show that ${\alpha}_{\rm gc} \approx -0.36 M_{\rm V}-9.2$, $r_{\rm c} \approx -1.85 M_{\rm V}$, and ${\alpha}_{\rm gc} \approx 0.93 {\alpha}_{\rm s}$, where $M_{\rm V}$ is the total $V$-band absolute magnitude of a galaxy., Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&A
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- 2005
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233. Kinematics of globular cluster systems and the formation of early-type galaxies
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Bekki, K., Beasley, Michael A., Brodie, Jean P., and Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We numerically investigate the kinematic properties of globular cluster systems (GCSs) in E/S0 galaxies formed from dissipationless merging of spiral galaxies. The metal-poor globular clusters (MPCs) and metal-rich clusters (MRCs) in the merger progenitors are initially assumed to have spatial distributions consistent with the Milky Way GC system. Our principal results, which can be tested against observations, are as follows. Both MPCs and MRCs in elliptical galaxies formed from major mergers can exhibit significant rotation at large radii ($\sim$20 kpc) due to the conversion of initial orbital angular momentum into intrinsic angular momentum of the remnant. MPCs show higher central velocity dispersions than MRCs for most major merger models. $V_{\rm m}/{\sigma}_{0}$ (where $V_{\rm m}$ and ${\sigma}_{0}$, are the GCS maximum rotational velocity and central velocity dispersion of respectively) ranges from 0.2--1.0 and 0.1--0.9 for the MPCs and MRCs respectively, within $6R_{\rm e}$ for the remnant elliptical. For most merger remnant ellipticals, $V_{\rm m}/{\sigma}_{0}$ of GCSs within $6R_{\rm e}$ is greater than that of the field stars within $2R_{\rm e}$. The radial profiles of rotational velocities and velocity dispersions of the GCSs depend upon the orbital configuration of the merger progenitors, their mass-ratios, and the viewing angle. For example, more flattened early-type galaxies, formed through mergers with small mass ratios ($\sim$ 0.1), show little rotation in the outer MRCs. Two-dimensional (2D) velocity dispersion distributions of the GCSs of merger remnant ellipticals are generally flattened for both MPCs and MRCs, reflecting the fact that the GCSs have anisotropic velocity dispersions (abridged)., Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures, accepted by MNRAS
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- 2005
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234. Spatially resolved stellar populations in the isolated elliptical NGC 821
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Proctor, Robert N., Forbes, Duncan A., Forestell, Amy, and Gebhardt, Karl
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of Lick absorption-line indices from three separate long-slit spectroscopic observations of the nearby isolated elliptical galaxy NGC 821. The three data sets present a consistent picture of the stellar population within one effective radius, in which strong gradients are evident in both luminosity-weighted age and metallicity. The central population exhibits a young age of ~4 Gyr and a metallicity ~3 times solar. At one effective radius the age has risen to ~12 Gyr and the metallicity fallen to less than 1/3 solar. The low metallicity population around one effective radius appears to have an exclusively red horizontal branch, with no significant contribution from the blue horizontal branch evident in some globular clusters of the same age and metallicity. Despite the strong central age gradient, we demonstrate that only a small fraction (<10%) of the galaxy's stellar mass can have been created in recent star formation events. We consider possible star formation histories for NGC 821 and find that the most likely cause of the young central population was a minor merger or tidal interaction that caused NGC 821 to consume its own gas in a centrally concentrated burst of star formation 1 to 4 Gyr ago., Comment: 11 pages. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2005
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235. Extragalactic Globular Clusters: Old Spectroscopic Ages and New Views on Their Formation
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Strader, Jay, Brodie, Jean P., Cenarro, A. J., Beasley, Michael A., and Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a meta-analysis of Keck spectra of extragalactic globular clusters (GCs) in a sample of eight galaxies, ranging from dwarfs to massive ellipticals. We infer ages for the metal-poor and metal-rich GCs in these galaxies through comparisons to Galactic GCs. Both subpopulations appear to be no younger than their Galactic counterparts, with ages ~> 10 Gyr. This is the largest sample of galaxies for which ages have been constrained spectroscopically. Our results support the formation of most GCs in massive galaxies at high redshift. We propose a scenario for the formation of GC subpopulations that synthesizes aspects of both accretion and in situ approaches in the context of galaxy formation through hierarchical merging., Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure. Accepted to AJ
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- 2005
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236. The fundamental plane of isolated early-type galaxies
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Reda, Fatma M., Forbes, Duncan A., and Hau, George K. T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Here we present new measurements of effective radii, surface brightnesses and internal velocity dispersions for 23 isolated early-type galaxies. The photometric properties are derived from new multi-colour imaging of 10 galaxies, whereas the central kinematics for 7 galaxies are taken from forthcoming work by Hau & Forbes. These are supplemented with data from the literature. We reproduce the colour-magnitude and Kormendy relations and strengthen the result of Paper I that isolated galaxies follow the same photometric relations as galaxies in high density environments. We also find that some isolated galaxies reveal fine structure indicative of a recent merger while others appear undisturbed. We examine the Fundamental Plane in both traditional R_e, mu_e and sigma space and also kappa-space. Most isolated galaxies follow the same Fundamental Plane tilt and scatter for galaxies in high density environments. However, a few galaxies notably deviate from the plane in the sense of having smaller M/L ratios. This can be understood in terms of their younger stellar populations, which are presumably induced by a gaseous merger. Overall, isolated galaxies have similar properties to those in roups and clusters with a slight enhancement in the frequency of recent mergers/interactions., Comment: Comments:11 pages, 7 Postscript figures, 2 JPEG figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2005
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237. The Correlation of Metallicity Gradient with Galaxy Mass
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Forbes, Duncan A., Sanchez-Blazquez, Patricia, and Proctor, Robert
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
A number of previous studies have searched for a correlation between radial metallicity gradients and early-type galaxy mass -- no convincing trends have been found. Here we re-examine this issue with several key enhancements: using total metallicity from studies that have broken the age-metallicity degeneracy, excluding galaxies with young stellar ages (i.e. tho se that have experienced a recent central starburst) and using the K-band to derive galaxy luminosities. We find that Coma cluster galaxies have metallicity gradients which correlate with galaxy mass. Furthermore, gradients have values similar to those of monolithic collapse models. The combination of dissipative formation and energy injection from supernova provides a mechanism for the trends with galaxy mass, however other explanations are possible. Additional high quality observational data is needed to further constrain the gas physics involved in galaxy formation., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRAS Letters, includes updated version of Fig. 2
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- 2005
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238. Old Globular Clusters Masquerading as Young in NGC 4365?
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Brodie, Jean P., Strader, Jay, Denicolo, Glenda, Beasley, Michael A., Cenarro, A. J., Larsen, Soeren S., Kuntschner, Harald, and Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
High signal-to-noise, low-resolution spectra have been obtained for 22 globular clusters (GCs) in NGC 4365. Some of these were selected as probable representatives of an intermediate-age (2-5 Gyr), extremely metal-rich GC subpopulation. The presence of such a subpopulation had been inferred from the unusual optical and near-IR color distributions of GCs in this otherwise typical Virgo elliptical galaxy. However, ages derived from Lick indices are consistent with uniformly old mean ages for all GCs in our sample. The metallicities of the clusters show some evidence for a trimodal distribution. The most metal-poor and metal-rich peaks are consistent with the values expected for an elliptical galaxy of this luminosity, but there appears to be an additional, intermediate-metallicity peak lying between them. New Hubble Space Telescope photometry is consistent with this result. A plausible scenario is that in earlier data these three peaks merged into a single broad distribution. Our results suggest that it is difficult to identify intermediate-age GC subpopulations solely with photometry, even when both optical and near-infrared colors are used., Comment: 30 pages, including 11 figures. AJ in press
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- 2005
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239. The Evolutionary History of the Elliptical Galaxy NGC 1052
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Pierce, Michael, Brodie, Jean P., Forbes, Duncan A., Beasley, Michael A., Proctor, Robert, and Strader, Jay
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have obtained Keck spectra for 16 globular clusters (GCs) associated with the merger remnant elliptical NGC 1052, as well as a long-slit spectrum of the galaxy. We derive ages, metallicities and abundance ratios from simple stellar population models using the methods of Proctor & Sansom (2002), applied to extragalactic GCs for the first time. We find all of the GCs to be ~13 Gyr old according to simple stellar populations, with a large range of metallicities. From the galaxy spectrum we find NGC 1052 to have a luminosity-weighted central age of ~2 Gyr and metallicity of [Fe/H]~+0.6. No strong gradients in either age or metallicity were found to the maximum radius measured (~1 kpc). However, we do find a strong radial gradient in alpha-element abundance, which reaches a very high central value. The young central starburst age is consistent with the age inferred from the HI tidal tails and infalling gas of \~1 Gyr. Thus, although NGC 1052 shows substantial evidence for a recent merger and an associated starburst, it appears that the merger did not induce the formation of new GCs, perhaps suggesting that little recent star formation occurred. This interpretation is consistent with ``frosting'' models for early-type galaxy formation. (Abridged), Comment: 14 Pages, 14 Figures, Accepted MNRAS, minor corrections to references
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- 2005
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240. Group, field and isolated early-type galaxies II. Global trends from nuclear data
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Denicolo, Glenda, Terlevich, Roberto, Terlevich, Elena, Forbes, Duncan A., and Terlevich, Alejandro
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have derived ages, metallicities and enhanced-element ratios [alpha/Fe] for a sample of 83 early-type galaxies essentially in groups, the field or isolated objects. The stellar population properties derived for each galaxy corresponds to the nuclear r_e/8 aperture extraction. The median age found for Es is 5.8 +- 0.6 Gyr and the average metallicity is +0.37 +- 0.03 dex. For S0s, the median age is 3.0 +- 0.6 Gyr and [Z/H] = 0.53 +- 0.04 dex. We compare the distribution of our galaxies in the Hbeta-[MgFe] diagram with Fornax galaxies. Our elliptical galaxies are 3-4 Gyr younger than Es in the Fornax cluster. We find that the galaxies lie in a plane defined by [Z/H] = 0.99 log sigma_0 - 0.46 log Age - 1.60. More massive (larger sigma_0) and older galaxies present, on average, large [alpha/Fe] values, and therefore, must have undergone shorter star-formation timescales. Comparing group against field/isolated galaxies, it is not clear that environment plays an important role in determining their stellar population history. In particular, our isolated galaxies show ages differing in more than 8 Gyr. Finally we explore our large spectral coverage to derive log(O/H) metallicity from the N2 indicator and compare it with model-dependent [Z/H]. We find that the O/H abundances are similar for all galaxies, and we can interpret it as if most chemical evolution has already finished in them., Comment: 23 pages, 17 postscript figures; accepted for publication in the MNRAS
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- 2004
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241. The Chemical Properties of Milky Way and M31 Globular Clusters: II. Stellar Population Model Predictions
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Beasley, Michael A., Brodie, Jean P., Strader, Jay, Forbes, Duncan A., Proctor, Robert N., Barmby, Pauline, and Huchra, John P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We derive ages, metallicities and [alpha/Fe] ratios from the integrated spectra of 23 globular clusters in M31, by employing multivariate fits to two stellar population models. In parallel we analyze spectra of 21 Galactic globular clusters in order to facilitate a differential analysis. We find that the M31 globular clusters separate into three distinct components in age and metallicity. We identify an old, metal-poor group (7 clusters), an old, metal-rich group (10 clusters) and an intermediate age (3-6 Gyr), intermediate-metallicity ([Z/H]~-1) group (6 clusters). This third group is not identified in the Galactic globular cluster sample. The majority of globular clusters in both samples appear to be enhanced in alpha-elements, the degree of enhancement being model-dependent. The intermediate age GCs appear to be the most enhanced, with [alpha/Fe]~0.4. These clusters are clearly depressed in CN with respect to the models and the bulk of the M31 and Milky Way sample. Compared to the bulge of M31, M32 and NGC 205, these clusters most resemble the stellar populations in NGC 205 in terms of age, metallicity and CN abundance. We infer horizontal branch morphologies for the M31 clusters using the Rose (1984) Ca II index, and demonstrate that blue horizontal branches are not leading to erroneous age estimates in our analysis. The intermediate age clusters have generally higher velocities than the bulk of the M31 cluster population. Spatially, three of these clusters are projected onto the bulge region, the remaining three are distributed at large radii. We discuss these objects within the context of the build-up of the M31 halo, and suggest that these clusters possibly originated in a gas-rich dwarf galaxy, which may or may not be presently observable in M31., Comment: 19 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal
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- 2004
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242. The DEEP Groth Strip Galaxy Redshift Survey. III. Redshift Catalog and Properties of Galaxies
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Weiner, Benjamin J., Phillips, Andrew C., Faber, S. M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Vogt, Nicole P., Simard, Luc, Gebhardt, Karl, Im, Myungshin, Koo, D. C., Sarajedini, Vicki L., Wu, Katherine L., Forbes, Duncan A., Gronwall, Caryl, Groth, Edward J., Illingworth, G. D., Kron, R. G., Rhodes, Jason, Szalay, A. S., and Takamiya, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe (DEEP) is a series of spectroscopic surveys of faint galaxies, targeted at the properties and clustering of galaxies at redshifts z ~ 1. We present the redshift catalog of the DEEP 1 GSS pilot phase of this project, a Keck/LRIS survey in the HST/WFPC2 Groth Survey Strip. The redshift catalog and data, including reduced spectra, are publicly available through a Web-accessible database. The catalog contains 658 secure galaxy redshifts with a median z=0.65, and shows large-scale structure walls to z = 1. We find a bimodal distribution in the galaxy color-magnitude diagram which persists to z = 1. A similar color division has been seen locally by the SDSS and to z ~ 1 by COMBO-17. For red galaxies, we find a reddening of only 0.11 mag from z ~ 0.8 to now, about half the color evolution measured by COMBO-17. We measure structural properties of the galaxies from the HST imaging, and find that the color division corresponds generally to a structural division. Most red galaxies, ~ 75%, are centrally concentrated, with a red bulge or spheroid, while blue galaxies usually have exponential profiles. However, there are two subclasses of red galaxies that are not bulge-dominated: edge-on disks and a second category which we term diffuse red galaxies (DIFRGs). The distant edge-on disks are similar in appearance and frequency to those at low redshift, but analogs of DIFRGs are rare among local red galaxies. DIFRGs have significant emission lines, indicating that they are reddened mainly by dust rather than age. The DIFRGs in our sample are all at z>0.64, suggesting that DIFRGs are more prevalent at high redshifts; they may be related to the dusty or irregular extremely red objects (EROs) beyond z>1.2 that have been found in deep K-selected surveys. (abridged), Comment: ApJ in press. 24 pages, 17 figures (12 color). The DEEP public database is available at http://saci.ucolick.org/
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- 2004
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243. Group, field and isolated early-type galaxies I. Observations and nuclear data
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Denicolo, Glenda, Terlevich, Roberto, Terlevich, Elena, Forbes, Duncan, Terlevich, Alejandro, and Carrasco, Luis
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
This is the first paper of a series on the investigation of stellar population properties and galaxy evolution of an observationally homogeneous sample of early-type galaxies in groups, field and isolated galaxies. We present high S/N long-slit spectroscopy of 86 nearby elliptical and S0 galaxies. 8 of them are isolated, selected according to a rigorous criterion. This survey has the advantage of covering a larger wavelength range than normally found in the literature, including [OIII]5007 and Halpha, both important for emission correction. Among the 86 galaxies with S/N>15 (per resolution element, for r_e/8 central aperture), 57 have their Hbeta-index corrected for emission, average correction is 0.190A in Hbeta; 42 galaxies reveal [OIII]5007 emission, of which 16 also show obvious Halpha emission. Most of the galaxies in the sample do not show obvious signs of disturbances nor tidal features in the morphologies, although 11 belong to the Arp catalogue of peculiar galaxies; only 3 of them (NGC750, NGC751, NGC3226) seem to be strongly interacting. We present the measurement of 25 central line-strength indices calibrated to the Lick/IDS system. Kinematic information is obtained for the sample. We analyse the line-strength index vs velocity dispersion relations for our sample of mainly low density environment galaxies, and compare the slope of the relations with cluster galaxies from the literature. Our main findings are that the index-sigma_0 relations presented for low-density regions are not significantly different from those of cluster E/S0s. The slope of the index-sigma_0 relations does not seem to change for early-type galaxies of different environmental densities, but the scatter of the relations seems larger for group, field and isolated galaxies than for cluster galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the MNRAS
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- 2004
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244. A Wide-Field HI Study of the NGC 1566 Group
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Kilborn, Virginia A., Koribalski, Baerbel S., Forbes, Duncan A., Barnes, David G., and Musgrave, Ruth C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on neutral hydrogen observations of a ~ 5.5 x 5.5 degree field around the NGC 1566 galaxy group with the multibeam narrow-band system on the 64-m Parkes telescope. We detected thirteen HI sources in the field, including two galaxies not previously known to be members of the group, bringing the total number of confirmed galaxies in this group to 26. Each of the HI galaxies can be associated with an optically catalogued galaxy. No 'intergalactic HI clouds' were found to an HI mass limit of ~ 3.5 x 10^8 Msun. We have estimated the expected HI content of the late-type galaxies in this group and find the total detected HI is consistent with our expectations. However, while no global HI deficiency is inferred for this group, two galaxies exhibit individual HI deficiencies. Further observations are needed to determine the gas removal mechanisms in these galaxies., Comment: MNRAS accepted, 13 pages, 9 Figures. Full resolution paper available from http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/~vkilborn/NGC_1566.pdf
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- 2004
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245. A Robust Method for the Analysis of Integrated Spectra from Globular Clusters using Lick Indices
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Proctor, Robert N., Forbes, Duncan A., and Beasley, Michael A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We define a method for analysis of the integrated spectra of extra-galactic globular clusters that provides more reliable measures of age, metallicity and alpha-element abundance ratio than have so far been achieved. The method involves the simultaneous fitting of up to 25 Lick indices in a chi-squared-fitting technique that maximises the use of the available data. Here we compare three sets of single stellar population (SSP) models of Lick indices to the high signal-to-noise, integrated spectra of 20 Galactic globular clusters. The ages, [Fe/H] and alpha-element abundance ratios derived from the SSP models are compared to the results of resolved stellar population studies from the literature. We find good consistency with the published values, with an agreement of better than 0.1 dex in all three derived parameters. The technique allows identification of abundance ratio anomalies, such as the known nitrogen over-abundance in Galactic globular clusters, and the presence of anomalous horizontal-branch morphologies. It also minimises the impact on the derived parameters of imperfect calibration to the Lick system, and reduction errors in general. The method defined in this work is therefore robust with respect to many of the difficulties that plague the application of SSP models in general, and is, consequently, well suited to the study of extra-galactic globular cluster systems., Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2004
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246. Probing Spectral Line Gradients Beyond One Effective Radius in NGC 3610
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Howell, Justin, Brodie, Jean, Strader, Jay, Forbes, Duncan, and Proctor, Robert
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The outer region (0.75--1.25 r_e in the B-band) of the merger-remnant elliptical NGC 3610 is studied using extremely high signal to noise Keck spectra, with a supplementary spectrum of the galaxy center. Stellar population parameters -- age, [Z/H], [$\alpha$/Fe] -- are measured in several apertures along the slit. Using the multi-index simultaneous fitting method of Proctor et al. (2004), no significant stellar population gradients are detected in the outer parts of the galaxy. The overall gradients relative to the galaxy center are consistent with those found in many other early-type galaxies, though the metallicity gradient is much steeper than would be expected if NGC 3610 formed in a major merger event. Standard analysis methods using the H$\beta$ index are found to produce spurious radially variable gradients., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted by AJ
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- 2004
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247. The Group Evolution Multiwavelength Study (GEMS): bimodal luminosity functions in galaxy groups
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Miles, Trevor A., Raychaudhury, Somak, Forbes, Duncan A., Goudfrooij, Paul, Ponman, Trevor J., and Kozhurina-Platais, Vera
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present B and R-band luminosity functions (LF) for a sample of 25 nearby groups of galaxies. We find that the LFs of the groups with low X-ray luminosity (L_X < 10^{41.7} erg/s) are significantly different from those of the X-ray brighter groups, showing a prominent dip around M_b = -18. While both categories show lack of late-type galaxies in their central regions, X-ray dim groups also show a more marked concentration of optical luminosity towards the centre. A toy simulation shows that in the low velocity dispersion environment, as in the X-ray dim group, dynamical friction would facilitate more rapid merging, thus depleting intermediate-luminosity galaxies to form a few giant central galaxies, resulting in the prominent dip seen in our LFs. We suggest that X-ray dim (or low velocity dispersion) groups are the present sites of rapid dynamical evolution rather than their X-ray bright counterparts, and may be the modern precursors of fossil groups. We predict that these groups of low velocity dispersion would harbour younger stellar populations than groups or clusters with higher velocity dispersion., Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2004
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248. The Photometric Properties of Isolated Early-Type Galaxies
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Reda, Fatma M., Forbes, Duncan A., Beasley, Michael A., O'Sullivan, Ewan J., and Goudfrooij, Paul
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Isolated galaxies are important since they probe the lowest density regimes inhabited by galaxies. We define a sample of 36 nearby isolated early-type galaxies for further study. Our isolation criteria require them to have no comparable-mass neighbours within 2 B-band magnitudes, 0.67 Mpc in the plane of the sky and 700 km/s in recession velocity. New wide-field optical imaging of 10 isolated galaxies with the Anglo-Australian Telescope confirms their early-type morphology and relative isolation. We also present imaging of 4 galaxy groups as a control sample. The isolated galaxies are shown to be more gravitationally isolated than the group galaxies. We find that the isolated early-type galaxies have a mean effective colour of (B-R)_e = 1.54 +/- 0.14, similar to their high-density counterparts. They reveal a similar colour-magnitude relation slope and small intrinsic scatter to cluster ellipticals. They also follow the Kormendy relation of surface brightness versus size for luminous cluster galaxies. Such properties suggest that the isolated galaxies formed at a similar epoch to cluster galaxies, such that the bulk of their stars are very old. However, our galaxy modelling reveals evidence for dust lanes, plumes, shells, boxy and disk isophotes in four out of nine galaxies. Thus at least some isolated galaxies have experienced a recent merger/accretion event which may have induced a small burst of star formation. We derive luminosity functions for the isolated galaxies and find a faint slope of -1.2, which is similar to the `universal' slope found in a wide variety of environments. We examine the number density distribution of galaxies in the field of the isolated galaxies., Comment: 16 pages, Latex, 17 figures, 6 tables, MNRAS in press
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- 2004
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249. Gemini/GMOS Imaging of Globular Clusters in the Virgo Galaxy NGC 4649 (M60)
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Forbes, Duncan A., Faifer, Favio Raul, Forte, Juan Carlos, Bridges, Terry, Beasley, Michael A., Gebhardt, Karl, Hanes, David A., Sharples, Ray, and Zepf, Stephen E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Sloan g and i imaging from the GMOS instrument on the Gemini North telescope for the globular cluster (GC) system around the Virgo galaxy NGC 4649 (M60). Our three pointings, taken in good seeing conditions, cover an area of about 90 sq. arcmins. We detect 2,151 unresolved sources. Applying colour and magnitude selection criteria to this source list gives 995 candidate GCs that is greater than 90% complete to a magnitude of i = 23.6, with little contamination from background galaxies. We find fewer than half a dozen potential Ultra Compact Dwarf galaxies around NGC 4649. Foreground extinction from the nearby spiral NGC 4647 is limited to be A_V < 0.1. We confirm the bimodality in the GC colour distribution found by earlier work using HST/WFPC2 imaging. As is commonly seen in other galaxies, the red GCs are concentrated towards the centre of the galaxy, having a steeper number density profile than the blue GC subpopulation. The varying ratio of red-to-blue GCs with radius can largely explain the overall GC system colour gradient. The underlying galaxy starlight has a similar density profile slope and colour to the red GCs. This suggests a direct connection between the galaxy field stars and the red GC subpopulation. We estimate a total GC population of 3700 +/- 900, with the uncertainty dominated by the extrapolation to larger radii than observed. This total number corresponds to a specific frequency S_N = 4.1 +/- 1.0. Future work will present properties derived from GMOS spectra of the NGC 4649 GCs., Comment: 20 pages, Latex, 14 figures, 2 tables, MNRAS in press
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- 2004
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250. The Unusual Tidal Dwarf Candidate in the Merger System NGC 3227/6: Star Formation in a Tidal Shock?
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Mundell, Carole G., James, Phil A., Loiseau, Nora, Schinnerer, Eva, and Forbes, Duncan A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of active star formation in the HI cloud associated with the interacting Seyfert system NGC 3227/NGC 3226 that was originally identified as a candidate tidal dwarf galaxy (TDG) by Mundell et al. and that we name J1023+1952. We present the results of broad-band BRIJHK and ultraviolet imaging that show the HI cloud is associated with massive on-going star formation seen as a cluster of blue knots (M_B < -15.5 mag) surrounded by a diffuse ultraviolet halo and co-spatial with a ridge of high column density neutral hydrogen its southern half. We also detect Ha emission from the knots with a flux density corresponding to a star-formation rate of SFR~0.011 Msun per yr. Although J1023+1952 spatially overlaps the edge of the disk of NGC 3227, it has a mean HI velocity 150 km/s higher than that of NGC 3227 so is kinematically distinct; comparison of ionized and neutral gas kinematics in the star-forming region show closely matched velocities, providing strong evidence that the knots are embedded in J1023+1952 and do not merely lie behind in the disk of NGC 3227, thus confirming J1023+1952 as a gas-rich dwarf galaxy. We discuss two scenarios for the origin of J1023+1952; as a third, pre-existing dwarf galaxy involved in the interaction with NGC 3227 and NGC 3226, or a newly-forming dwarf galaxy condensing out of the tidal debris removed from the gaseous disk of NGC 3227. Given the lack of a detectable old stellar population, a tidal origin is more likely. If J1023+1952 is a bound object forming from returning gaseous tidal tail material, we infer a dynamically young age similar to its star-formation age, and suggests it is in the earliest stages of TDG evolution. Whatever the origin of J1023+1952 we suggest that its star formation is shock-triggered by collapsing tidal debris. (Abridged), Comment: 26 pages, including 8 figures and 2 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ (Oct), paper with color figures available at http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/~cgm/mundell.pdf
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- 2004
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