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Narrow band imaging in [OIII] and Halpha to search for ICPNe in the Virgo cluster

Authors :
Arnaboldi, M.
Freeman, K. C.
Okamura, S.
Yasuda, N.
Gerhard, O.
Napolitano, N. R.
Pannella, M.
Ando, H.
Do, M.
Furusawa, H.
Hamabe, M.
Kimura, M.
Kajino, T.
Komiyama, Y.
Miyazaki, S.
Nakata, F.
Ouchi, M.
Sekiguchi, M.
Shimasaku, K.
Yagi, M.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

We have identified intracluster planetary nebulae in a Virgo cluster core field by imaging with the Subaru Suprime-Cam through two narrow band filters centered at the redshifted wavelengths of the [OIII] $\lambda=5007$ \AA and the H$\alpha$ $\lambda = 6563$ \AA lines; broad-band images in V and R were acquired to check for emission in the adjacent continuum. Emission line objects in Virgo are then selected from the two-color diagram ([OIII] -- Halpha) vs. ([OIII] -- (V+R)), which is calibrated using PNe in M84 (Jacoby et al. 1990). Using both [OIII] and Halpha allows us to distinguish bona-fide planetary nebulae from high redshift emission-line galaxies at the bright end of the [OIII] luminosity function. Spectroscopic observations of a subsample of these objects were made at the TNG and at the VLT, in a region around M84 and in an intracluster field respectively. The observations confirm the efficiency of the combined [OIII]+H$\alpha$ imaging to identify true PNe. We also obtained the first spectrum of an intracluster PN which shows the [OIII] doublet with S/N > 10 and its Halpha emission. From the results based on the spectroscopic follow-up, we derive a lower limit to the fraction of the Virgo cluster light contributed by the intracluster stars at the surveyed position in the cluster core: it amounts to 10%.<br />Comment: 32 pages,11 figures, in press on AJ, February 2003

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7872807b74288a729dc781c277a8e21a