Back to Search Start Over

How nucleation and luminosity shape faint dwarf galaxies

Authors :
Karen X. Ribbeck
Matthew A. Taylor
C. Spengler
Patrick Côté
Thomas H. Puzia
Eric W. Peng
B. W. Miller
Joel Roediger
Paul Eigenthaler
Rubén Sánchez-Janssen
Laura Ferrarese
Yasna Ordenes-Briceño
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We study the intrinsic shapes of a sample of over 400 quiescent galaxies in the cores of the Virgo and Fornax clusters with luminosities $10^{6} \leq L_{g}/L_{\odot} \leq 10^{8}$. Similar to satellites of the Local Group and Centaurus A, these faint, low surface brightness cluster galaxies are best described as a family of thick ($C/A > 0.5$), oblate-triaxial spheroids. However, the large sample size allows us to show that the flattening of their stellar distributions depends both on luminosity and on the presence of a nuclear star cluster. Nucleated satellites are thicker at all luminosities compared to their non-nucleated counterparts, and fainter galaxies are systematically thicker as well, regardless of nucleation. Once nucleation is accounted for, we find no evidence that the environment the satellites live in plays a relevant role in setting their three-dimensional structure. We interpret both the presence of stellar nuclei and the associated thicker shapes as the result of preferential early and rapid formation, effectively making these faint nucleated galaxies the first generation of cluster satellites.<br />Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e0f1720dc78735b8a37dcb2db571661