1. Planetary nebulae populations in the haloes of nearby massive early-type galaxies
- Author
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Hartke, J., Arnaboldi, M., Gerhard, O., Ennis, A. I., Pulsoni, C., Coccato, L., Cortesi, A., Freeman, K. C., Kuijken, K., Merrifield, M., and Napolitano, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Planetary nebulae (PNe) are excellent tracers of the metal-poor haloes of nearby early-type galaxies. They are commonly used to trace spatial distribution and kinematics of the halo and intracluster light at distances of up to 100 Mpcs. The results on the early-type galaxy M105 in the Leo I group represent a benchmark for the quantitative analysis of halo and intragroup light. Since the Leo I group lies at just a 10 Mpc distance, it is at the ideal location to compare results from resolved stellar populations with the homogeneous constraints over a much larger field of view from the PN populations. In M105, we have -- for the first time -- established a direct link between the presence of a metal-poor halo as traced by resolved red-giant branch stars and a PN population with a high specific frequency ($\alpha$-parameter). This confirms our inferences that the high $\alpha$-parameter PN population in the outer halo of M49 in the Virgo Cluster traces the metal-poor halo and intra-group light., Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 384: Planetary Nebulae: a Universal Toolbox in the Era of Precision Astrophysics
- Published
- 2023