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Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observaciona Depto. de Astronomía (UGto) Lecture 2 Properties of Galaxies Observational Properties Photometric Properties magnitudes and luminosities colors (and color gradients) surface brightness (and photometric diameters) K-corrections brightness profiles Spectroscopic Properties Physical Properties the real shape mass, luminosity and diameter gas fraction stellar populations chemical composition Correlations of Structural Parameters the Faber-Jackson relation (E) the Tully-Fisher relation (S)

Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

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Depto. de Astronomía (UGto). Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional. Lecture 2 Properties of Galaxies. Observational Properties Photometric Properties magnitudes and luminosities colors (and color gradients) surface brightness (and photometric diameters) K-corrections - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología ObservacionalDepto. de Astronomía (UGto)

Lecture 2 Properties of Galaxies

Observational Properties Photometric Properties

• magnitudes and luminosities• colors (and color gradients)• surface brightness (and photometric diameters)• K-corrections• brightness profiles

Spectroscopic Properties

Physical Properties the real shape mass, luminosity and diameter gas fraction stellar populations chemical composition

Correlations of Structural Parameters the Faber-Jackson relation (E) the Tully-Fisher relation (S)

Page 2: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: magnitudes and luminosities

Luminosity

L = Pot = E / t

Flux

F = Pot / A = E / t.A

L = A.F = 4r2 T4

f = ∫0∞ f T F R d

T → transmission of atm.F → transmission of filter

R → efficiency of telescope system

m1 – m2 = – 2.5 log10 (f1/f2)m = – 2.5 log10 f + cte

Apparent magnitudes:

f = (D/d)2 Fm – M = – 2.5 log10 (f/F)

m – M = 5 log10 d[pc] – 5 + Am – M = 5 log10 d[kpc] + 10 + A

m – M = 5 log10 d[Mpc] + 25 + A + K

Absolute magnitudes:

Page 3: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: filters and photometric systems

[Johnson & Morgan 1953, ApJ 117, 313 Cousins 1976, MNRAS 81, 25 Glass 1974, MNASSA 33, 53]

[Fukugita et al. 1996, AJ 111, 1748]

u g r i z SDSS system

UBVRIJHKLM Johnson-Cousins-Glass system

Page 4: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: absolute magnitudes of galaxies

[Roberts & Haynes 1994, ARAA 32, 115]

V -25 -24 -23 -22 -21 -20 -19 -18 -17 -16 -15 -14 -13 -12 -11 -10 -9 -8D/cDES0SaSbScSd/SmIm/IrrLSBdEdSphBCD

Correlates Correlates poorly withpoorly withHubble typeHubble type

Page 5: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: colors

Mean colors:

galaxy colors are related to mean stellar population content, metallicities, ages, SF and internal dust extinction galaxy colors correlate with type: E, composed almost entirely of red old stars, are redder, while Irr, the least evolved systems, containing a lot of gas, are bluer however, there are great variations in color from one galaxy to another for the same type (dispersion)

[Roberts & Haynes 1994, ARAA 32, 115]

Correlates Correlates well withwell with

Hubble typeHubble type

main sequence of stars

Page 6: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: color gradients

Color gradients: usually E are redder in their nucleus than in their outer regions – since E are basically formed by a single pop of old stars (same age and almost no gas and no SF), the (WEAK) color gradient may be due to a gradient of metallicity! (bluer when lower metal abundance) in S, color change globally from red to blue: from bulge to disc (STRONG color gradients) If we consider only the disc, color indices do not seem to vary significantly – this imply a practically constant SF (continuous inflow of gas from exterior to disc?) Small gradients on discs due to metallicity gradients, different degree of internal extinction by dust, or gradients on the mean ages of stars are possible

NGC 4494 (E)

[Peletier et al. 1990, A&A 233, 62]

[Gadotti & Dos Anjos 2001, AJ 122, 1298]

(Sbc)

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Photometric properties: color gradients

Color gradients: most E/S0 are concentrated on a spot, presenting a weak but definite color gradient, while about 10% are bluer in the center (emission lines, SF burst in the center) late-type galaxies are spread on a branch below the E/S0 (stronger gradients) that goes to positive gradients for very late galaxies (with SF bursts in their centers)

[Par

k &

Cho

i 20

05,

ApJ

635

, L2

9]

(g–i) = (g–i)R<0.5Rpet – (g–i)R>0.5Rpet

Page 8: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Holmberg radius → half diameter of galaxy at Σ = 26.5 μpg

de Vaucouleurs radius → half diameter of galaxy at Σ = 25 μB, corrected to face-on and of dust obscuration (called D25)

Photometric properties: surface brightness

Isophotes: curves that encircle areas of certain Σ (lines of equal Σ)

[de Vaucouleurs et al. 1991, 3rd Reference Catalogue of Bright Galaxies]

Σ = – 2.5 log10 (f/Ω) + cte

Surface brightness:

to first approximation, the Σ of an extended object is independent of its distance: f falls of as 1/d2 and also does the Ω in the same proportion is measured in mag arcsec-2 (or μm, where m is the magnitude band)

Isophotal (or photometric) diameter: diameter at which some particular Σ level is reached (semimajor axis of the corresponding isophote)

Page 9: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: surface brightness

[see Binney & Merrifield 1998, Galactic Astronomy, cap. 4.2 and 4.4]

Corrections to surface brightness measurements:

sky brightness – at a good site, on a moonless night, the blank sky typically has a Σ 23 μB, due to:• air glow (photochemical processes in the upper atmosphere + Hg and Na lines radiation from street lamps of nearby cities)• zodiacal light (sunlight scattered off particulate matter in the SS)• MW background (diffuse light from faint and unresolved stars in the Galaxy)• extragalactic background (diffuse light from distant, faint, unresolved galaxies)

seeing – the effect of seeing introduces an apparent core (PSF) into a surface brightness profile

deprojection – correction of inclination in relation to the plane of sky (to face-on)

obscuration by internal dust – for the case of late-type galaxies, dust can absorb or scatter their own light – the apparent lum. of a transparent galaxy is independent of its orientation to the LOS (stars emit light isotropically), but peak Σ increases as galaxy is tipped from face-on to edge-on (since at edge-on orientation the same lum. comes from a smaller area than at face-on) – but a galaxy filled with dust will appear to be less luminous when seen edge-on than face-on (light passes a longer column of ISM) – blue light is more strongly absorbed and scattered than red light

μU μB μV μR μI

22.0 22.7 21.8 20.9 19.9

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Photometric properties: K-corrections

K-correction (redshift dimming):

since we do not cover the entire spectral range of galaxies we observe, to compare the measurements of galaxies at different z we must put them at a same reference frame (normally a standard measure at z = 0) so, the correction, called k-correction, depends on bands (filters) of observations, shapes of galaxies’s SEDs and z must be applied to magnitudes and Σ

[Pence 1976, ApJ 203, 39; Hogg et al. 2002, astro-ph 0210394]

Page 11: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: K-corrections

K-correction (redshift dimming):

Page 12: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: surface brightness profile for spheroids

Radial profiles of Ellipticals:

E have a pronounced maximum of Σ at their centre, and a rapid and uniform decrease with radial distance, following a quasi power law similar profile to bulges of S0s and spirals cDs have envelope and deviate in large r

Hubble’s profile [Hubble 1930]

Σ(r) = Σ0 (r/Rc + 1) –2

Σ0 = Σ(r=0)Rc is the core radius (where the surface brightness is Σ0/2)

de Vaucouleurs’ profile [de Vaucouleurs 1948]

log[Σ(r)/Σe] = –3.3307 [(r/Re)1/4 –1]Σ(r) = Σe exp{– 7.6692 [(r/Re)1/4 – 1]}

Re = (ae be)1/2, is the radius containing half of total light (effective radius)Σe = Σ(Re)

Σ0 103.33 Σe 2141 Σe

Ltot = 7.215 π Σe Re2 (b/a)

< Σ >e = 3.6072 Σe

Page 13: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: surface brightness profile for spheroids

Page 14: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Early-type’s profile: peaked or shallow cusps?

Center brightness of early-type galaxies: bright E, S0 and BCGs have a bimodal distribution of central cusp slope: brighter galaxies have core centers while less bright ones have peaked centers (HST sample).

[Lauer et al. 2007, ApJ 664, 226]

Page 15: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: surface brightness profile for discs

Radial profile of Spirals and Lenticulars:

Since S are much more complex systems (bulge, bar, disc, spiral arms, rings, dust, ...), their profiles also show a considerable variety and individuality of form. their profile can be decomposed on two main compenents: bulge (that closely resemble the profile of ellipticals) and disc (that has an exponential profile)

Exponential profile [Freeman 1970]

Σ(r) = Σ0 e-r/h

Σ0 = Σ(r=0), extrapolatedh is the disc scale length

Ldisc = 4π h2 Σ0

< Σ >0 = 1.9016 Σ0

Bulge fraction (T = total luminosity)

B/T = Re2 Σe / (Re

2 Σe + 0.28 h2 Σ0)D/B = (B/T)1 1

Page 16: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: surface brightness profile for discs

Page 17: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Spirals profile’s: constant central surface brightness?

Freeman’s Law: Freeman (1970) noted that, although the disc components of large disc galaxies (from S0 to Im) have a wide range of lum., there is a remarkably little scatter in their value of Σ0: 21.7 0.3 μB

Disney (1976) proposed that this result could be influenced by selection effects (brightest and largest disc galaxies were naturally the first that could be measured). Van der Kruit (1989) suggested that this law is valid for “non-dwarf galaxies”. LSB galaxies, more carefully studied from 90’s, also do not fit to the Freeman’s Law. In fact, they are usually defined as galaxies with Σ0 fainter than 23 μB, and are found with Σ0 as faint as 25 μB.

Page 18: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Photometric properties: general surface brightness profile

Sersic’s generalized profile [Sersic 1968]

Σ(r) = Σe exp{–bn [(r/Re)1/n – 1]}

bn = 2n – 0.324 [Trujillo, Graham & Caon 2001]

For a regular elliptical/bulge profilen = 4 b4 = 7.67

Σ(r) = Σe exp{–7.67 [(r/Re)1/4 – 1]}

For an exponential disc profilen = 1 b1 = 1.68

Σ(r) = Σe exp{–1.68 [(r/Re) – 1]} = exp{1.68} Σe exp{–1.68 r/Re} = 5.36 Σe exp{–r/(Re/1.68)} = Σ0 exp{–r/h}

Σ0 = 5.3567 Σe

h = Re/1.6783[Pannella et al. 2006, ApJ 639, L1]

Page 19: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Spectroscopic properties

Galaxy spectra: integrated spectra of galaxies give us information mainly on the stellar populations that compose the galaxy and on star formation (SF) classes of galaxy spectra are correlated with morphological classification population synthesis is the construction of a galaxy spectra from the combination of specific proportions of different types of stellar spectra.

[Humason 1936] – first attempt to classify galaxy spectra: E (spectra close to G3.6) Sc (resembles F8.8)

Absorption spectra (early-type):

• stellar population: old stars• no recent SF (very low cold gas)• Balmer break (λ < 4000) – opacity of stellar photosphere increases fastly below this λ (presence of metals in different degrees of ionization)• absorption lines (produced on the atm. of cold red giants): CaII K (λ3934), CaII H (λ3969), G (λ4304), Mgb (λ5175), Ca+Fe (λ5269), Na D (λ5893), etc

Emission spectra (late-type):

• stellar population: rich in young OB stars • continuous SF (early S – decreases w/ time) (very gas rich)• high UV continuum (indicative of SF)• emission lines (produced by the gas, photoionized by energy from massive OB stars): OII (λ3727), Hβ (λ4861), OIII (λ4959, λ5007), Hα (λ6563), NII (λ6548, λ6584), SII (λ6717, λ6731), etc

Page 20: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Spectroscopic properties

K H

G

Mg

CaFeNaH

KH

G Mg NaH

H

SII

OII

NII H

SII

OII

NII

OIII

OIII

H

KH

G

MgCaFe

NaH

H

OII

KH

G

Mg

CaFe NaH

H

SIIOII

NIIOIII

OIII

H

[Kennicutt 1992, ApJS 79, 255]

Page 21: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

KH

G

Mg

CaFeNaH

Absorption spectra (early-type)

stellar spectra forcomparison

Page 22: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

H

SII

OII

NII

OIII

OIII

H

stellar spectra forcomparison

Emission spectra (late-type)

Page 23: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Spectroscopic classification

[Dressler et al. 1999, ApJS 122, 51]

Page 24: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical properties: the real shape of galaxies

spheroidsa = b > c oblatea > b = c prolate

triaxiala > b > c

inclination angle:i = arc cos (b/a)

edge-on i = 90° face-on i = 0°

Elipticals ellipsoids

Spirals disks (flat oblate spheroids)

i

ia

b

cos(i) = b/a

planeof sky

Page 25: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical properties: masses

Total masses:

M/L ratio:

[Roberts & Haynes 1994, ARAA 32, 115]

Property E S Irr Total mass (M) 105 – 1013 108 – 1012 107 – 1010

Total luminosity (L) 105 – 1011 109 – 1011 107 – 1010

Diameter (MW) 0.01 – 5 0.02 – 1.5 0.05 – 0.25

Correlates Correlates poorly withpoorly withHubble typeHubble type

Page 26: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical properties: gas (HI + H2) fraction

Gas fraction:

[Roberts & Haynes 1994, ARAA 32, 115]

Correlates Correlates well withwell with

Hubble typeHubble type

Page 27: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical Properties: stellar content

Population II: E, bulges, halos cool red giants gas and dust free Globular Clusters very old (CM diagram) deficient in metals

[Baade 1940] – introduced the idea of stellar populations (discs ellipticals/bulges)

Population I: discs (particularly spiral arms) hot blue supergiants accompained by gas and dust Open Clusters young (CM diagram) higher metal abundances

Population III: zero metal

Page 28: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical Properties: stellar populations

Modern stellar populations:

Population typical stars velocity shape of system metal abundance dispersion (respect to H) Halo pop. GC, red giants 130 spherical 0.003

Intermediate pop. II high vel. stars 50 intermediate 0.01

Disc pop. weak line stars 30 intermediate 0.02

Intermediate pop. I strong line stars 20 intermediate 0.03

Extreme pop. I blue supergiants 10 flat 0.04

Page 29: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical Properties: chemical composition

Metallicity:

X HY HeZ “metals”

[Fe/H] = log(Fe/H) – log(Fe/H)

{12 + log(O/H)} = 8.91

Mg2

[Kunth & Östlin 2000, AeAR 10, 1]

LMC

SMC

halo

BCD

Page 30: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Glob. Cl.

Galaxies

Stellar metallicity• absorption lines in the spectra of individual stars (nearby galaxies)• Mg2 in the integrated spectra of distant early-type galaxies• more mixed, but metallicity at the time of formation and depends on population

[O/H]R23=(OII+OIII)/Hβ

[Mg/Fe]

Gas metallicity• O, N, S, Ne, Ar, Fe in optical emission lines of HII regions or PNe• Fe in the X-ray spectra of hot ICM of clusters• absorption lines of QSO Lyα systems• up-to-date measure, but subjected to gradients and contamination (winds from young massive stars)

Physical Properties: chemical composition

[Gol

ev &

Pru

gnie

l 199

8, A

eAS

132

, 25

5]

Page 31: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical Properties: chemical composition

Metallicity:

(Z/Z) mean disc bulge halo Ellipticals 0.3 – 2

Spirals -- 0.1 – 1 3 > 0.0001

LSB 0.02 – 0.1

dE 0.01 – 0.2

dIrr 0.02 – 0.1

BCD 0.005 0.5

dSph 0.006 0.2

High-z abs-line systems 0.001 – 0.3

But.But.correlates correlates well withwell with

massmass(mass-mettalicity(mass-mettalicity

relation)relation)

[Terlevich et al 1991, AeAS 91, 285; Mateo 1998, ARAA 36,435; Kunth & Östlin 2000, AeAR 10, 1]

• Objects with high and low metallicity are found at all z’s!• Objects that in the Local Univ appear as metal deficient are expected to be even more deficient at high-z, if we could observe their precursors• Metallicity may be determined by: star formation history (SFH), outflows/inflows, mergers/interactions, and mixing.

Page 32: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical Properties: chemical composition

Mass-Metallicity relation:

• less massive galaxies are less able to retain the gas and stellar ejecta, loosing the freshly produced metals in the form of galactic outflows [Tremonti et al. 2004, ApJ 613, 898]• high mass stars (that produce more and fastly metals) are preferencially produced in high SF epochs or sites (variable integrated stellar IMF) [Köppen et al. 2007, MNRAS 375, 673]

Page 33: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Physical Properties: chemical composition

[Izotov & Thuan 1998, ApJ 500, 188]

Primordial He abundance:

[see also, Peimbert et al. 2007, ApJ 666, 636]

Galaxy formation and evolution

models:

[Ogando et al. 2005, ApJ 632, L61]

monolithic

hierarchical

Page 34: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Correlations of physical properties: the Faber-Jackson relation

if σ0 can be measured for an E, its intrinsic L can be found by the relation, and hence, by measuring its flux, its distance can be found.

[Faber & Jackson 1976] – discovered, for E, a relation between the lum. (L) and the central stellar velocity dispersion (σ0): Le σ0

4

[Djorgovski & Davies 1987 and Dressler et al. 1987] – introduced the concept of Fundamental Plane (L σ0 r)log Re = 0.36 <Σe> + 1.4 log σ0

Le σ08/3 Σe

-3/5 [Σ = f (L,r)]

[Dressler et al. 1987] – also proposed the Dn–σ relation (incorporating the dependende of both L and Σe into a new variable Dn)

σ0 Dn3/4

Dn → Σn = 20.75 μB

Page 35: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

Correlations of physical properties: the Fundamental Plane

[Kormendy & Djorgovski 1989, ARAA 27, 235]

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Correlations of physical properties: Fundamental Plane for dwarves

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Correlations of physical properties: the Tully-Fisher relation

[Tully & Fisher 1977] – discovered, for S, a relation between the lum. (L) and the width of the 21-cm HI line profile (that is related to the maximum rotation velocity – Doppler broadening).

if W can be measured for an S, its intrinsic L can be found by the relation, and hence, by measuring its flux, its distance can be found.

LB Wα α = 2.5

[Aaronson, Huchra & Mould 1979] – in the IR, the Tully-Fisher relation is more tightly correlated[Aaronson & Mould 1983] – α = 3.5 (B band) α = 4.3 (H band)

Page 38: Astronomía Extragaláctica y Cosmología Observacional

References:

Papers and books:

E.P. Hubble 1930, ApJ 71, 231 M. Humason 1936, ApJ 83, 10 W. Baade 1940, ApJ 100, 137 G. De Vaucouleurs 1948, Ann. Astrophys. 11, 247 J.–L. Sersic 1968, “Atlas de Galaxias Australes” (Cordoba, Obs. Astronomico) K.C. Freeman 1970, ApJ 160, 811 M. Disney 1976, Nature 263, 573 S.M. Faber & R.E. Jackson 1976, ApJ 204, 668 B. Tully & J.R. Fisher 1977, A&A 54, 661 M. Aaronson, J. Huchra & J. Mould 1979, ApJ 229, 1 M. Aaronson & J. Mould 1983, ApJ 265, 1 S. Djorgovski & M. Davis 1987, ApJ 313, 59 A. Dressler et al. 1987, ApJ 313, 42 P.C. van der Kruit 1989, In: “The Milky Way as a Galaxy”, eds. R. Buser & I. King I. Trujillo et al. 2001, MNRAS 326, 869 K. Rakos et al. 2003, Ap&SS, 284, 803 J. Moustakas & R. Kennicutt 2006, ApJ 651, 155