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The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey - XIII. Dust in early-type galaxies

Authors :
Alighieri, Sperello di Serego
Bianchi, Simone
Pappalardo, Cirino
Zibetti, Stefano
Auld, Robbie
Baes, Maarten
Bendo, George
Corbelli, Edvige
Davies, Jonathan
Davis, Timothy
De Looze, Ilse
Fritz, Jacopo
Gavazzi, Giuseppe
Giovanardi, Carlo
Grossi, Marco
Hunt, Leslie
Magrini, Laura
Pierini, Daniele
Xilouris, Manolis
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Aims. We study the dust content of a large optical input sample of 910 early-type galaxies (ETG) in the Virgo cluster, extending also to the dwarf ETG, and examine the results in relation with those on the other cold ISM components. Methods. We searched for far-infrared emission in all galaxies of the input sample using the 250 micron image of the Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey (HeViCS). This image covers a large fraction of the cluster. For the detected ETG we measured fluxes in 5 bands from 100 to 500 micron, and estimated the dust mass and temperature with modified black-body fits. Results. Dust is detected above the completeness limit of 25.4 mJy at 250 micron in 46 ETG, 43 of which are in the optically complete part of the input sample. In addition dust is present at fainter levels in another 6 ETG. We detect dust in the 4 ETG with synchrotron emission, including M 87. Dust appears to be much more concentrated than stars and more luminous ETG have higher dust temperatures. Dust detection rates down to the 25.4 mJy limit are 17% for ellipticals, about 40% for lenticulars (S0 + S0a) and around 3% for dwarf ETG. Dust mass does not correlate clearly with stellar mass and is often much more than that expected for a passive galaxy in a closed-box model. The dust-to-stars mass ratio anticorrelates with galaxy luminosity, and for some dwarf ETG reaches values as high as for dusty late-type galaxies. In the Virgo cluster slow rotators appear more likely to contain dust than fast ones. Comparing the dust results with those on HI from ALFALFA, there are only 8 ETG detected both in dust and in HI in the HeViCS area; 39 have dust but only an upper limit on HI, and 8 have HI but only an upper limit on dust. The locations of these galaxies in the cluster are different, with the dusty ETG concentrated in the densest regions, while the HI rich ETG are at the periphery.<br />Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics; modified to reflect the on-line forthcoming version on the A&A web site

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1301.2160
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201220551