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The Atlas3D project - XXIV. The intrinsic shape distribution of early-type galaxies

Authors :
Weijmans, Anne-Marie
de Zeeuw, P. T.
Emsellem, Eric
Krajnovic, Davor
Lablanche, Pierre-Yves
Alatalo, Katherine
Blitz, Leo
Bois, Maxime
Bournaud, Frederic
Bureau, Martin
Cappellari, Michele
Crocker, Alison
Davies, Roger
Davis, Timothy
Duc, Pierre-Alain
Khochfar, Sadegh
Kuntschner, Harald
McDermid, Richard
Morganti, Raffaella
Naab, Thorsten
Oosterloo, Tom
Sarzi, Marc
Scott, Nicholas
Serra, Paolo
Kleijn, Gijs Verdoes
Young, Lisa
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We use the Atlas3D sample to perform a study of the intrinsic shapes of early-type galaxies, taking advantage of the available combined photometric and kinematic data. Based on our ellipticity measurements from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7, and additional imaging from the Isaac Newton Telescope, we first invert the shape distribution of fast and slow rotators under the assumption of axisymmetry. The so-obtained intrinsic shape distribution for the fast rotators can be described with a Gaussian with a mean flattening of q=0.25 and standard deviation sigma_q = 0.14, and an additional tail towards rounder shapes. The slow rotators are much rounder, and are well described with a Gaussian with mean q = 0.63 and sigma_q =0.09. We then checked that our results were consistent when applying a different and independent method to obtain intrinsic shape distributions, by fitting the observed ellipticity distributions directly using Gaussian parametrisations for the intrinsic axis ratios. Although both fast and slow rotators are identified as early-type galaxies in morphological studies, and in many previous shape studies are therefore grouped together, their shape distributions are significantly different, hinting at different formation scenarios. The intrinsic shape distribution of the fast rotators shows similarities with the spiral galaxy population. Including the observed kinematic misalignment in our intrinsic shape study shows that the fast rotators are predominantly axisymmetric, with only very little room for triaxiality. For the slow rotators though there are very strong indications that they are (mildly) triaxial.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1408.1099
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stu1603