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Tully-Fisher analysis of the multiple cluster system Abell 901/902

Authors :
Bösch, Benjamin
Böhm, Asmus
Wolf, Christian
Aragón-Salamanca, Alfonso
Ziegler, Bodo L.
Barden, Marco
Gray, Meghan E.
Balogh, Michael
Meisenheimer, Klaus
Schindler, Sabine
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

We derive rotation curves from optical emission lines of 182 disk galaxies (96 in the cluster and 86 in the field) in the region of Abell 901/902 located at $z\sim 0.165$. We focus on the analysis of B-band and stellar-mass Tully-Fisher relations. We examine possible environmental dependencies and differences between normal spirals and "dusty red" galaxies, i.e. disk galaxies that have red colors due to relatively low star formation rates. We find no significant differences between the best-fit TF slope of cluster and field galaxies. At fixed slope, the field population with high-quality rotation curves (57 objects) is brighter by $\Delta M_{B}=-0\fm42\pm0\fm15$ than the cluster population (55 objects). We show that this slight difference is at least in part an environmental effect. The scatter of the cluster TFR increases for galaxies closer to the core region, also indicating an environmental effect. Interestingly, dusty red galaxies become fainter towards the core at given rotation velocity (i.e. total mass). This indicates that the star formation in these galaxies is in the process of being quenched. The luminosities of normal spiral galaxies are slightly higher at fixed rotation velocity for smaller cluster-centric radii. Probably these galaxies are gas-rich (compared to the dusty red population) and the onset of ram-pressure stripping increases their star-formation rates. The results from the TF analysis are consistent with and complement our previous findings. Dusty red galaxies might be an intermediate stage in the transformation of infalling field spiral galaxies into cluster S0s, and this might explain the well-known increase of the S0 fraction in galaxy clusters with cosmic time.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics; 16 pages, 14 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1304.6186
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201321561