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The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Trends in [\alpha/Fe] as a Function of Morphology and Environment

Authors :
Watson, Peter J.
Davies, Roger L.
Brough, Sarah
Croom, Scott M.
D'Eugenio, Francesco
Glazebrook, Karl
Groves, Brent
López-Sánchez, Ángel R.
van de Sande, Jesse
Scott, Nicholas
Vaughan, Sam P.
Walcher, Jakob
Bland-Hawthorn, Joss
Bryant, Julia J.
Goodwin, Michael
Lawrence, Jon S.
Lorente, Nuria P. F.
Owers, Matt S.
Richards, Samuel
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We present a new set of index-based measurements of [$\alpha$/Fe] for a sample of 2093 galaxies in the SAMI Galaxy Survey. Following earlier work, we fit a global relation between [$\alpha$/Fe] and the galaxy velocity dispersion $\sigma$ for red sequence galaxies, [$\alpha$/Fe]=(0.378$\pm$0.009)log($\sigma$/100)+(0.155$\pm$0.003). We observe a correlation between the residuals and the local environmental surface density, whereas no such relation exists for blue cloud galaxies. In the full sample, we find that elliptical galaxies in high-density environments are $\alpha$-enhanced by up to 0.057$\pm$0.014 dex at velocity dispersions $\sigma$<100 km/s, compared with those in low-density environments. This $\alpha$-enhancement is morphology-dependent, with the offset decreasing along the Hubble sequence towards spirals, which have an offset of 0.019$\pm$0.014 dex. At low velocity dispersion and controlling for morphology, we estimate that star formation in high-density environments is truncated $\sim1$ Gyr earlier than in low-density environments. For elliptical galaxies only, we find support for a parabolic relationship between [$\alpha$/Fe] and $\sigma$, with an environmental $\alpha$-enhancement of at least 0.03 dex. This suggests strong contributions from both environment and mass-based quenching mechanisms. However, there is no evidence for this behaviour in later morphological types.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. Revised after comments from referee

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2106.01928
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab3477