Bibcode
Ganda, Katia; Peletier, Reynier F.; McDermid, Richard M.; Falcón-Barroso, Jesús; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Bacon, Roland; Cappellari, Michele; Davies, Roger L.; Emsellem, Eric; Krajnović, Davor; Kuntschner, Harald; Sarzi, Marc; van de Ven, Glenn
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 380, Issue 2, pp. 506-540.
Advertised on:
9
2007
Citations
70
Refereed citations
58
Description
We present absorption line strength maps for a sample of 18 Sb-Sd
galaxies observed using the integral-field spectrograph SAURON operating
at the William Herschel Telescope on La Palma, as part of a project
devoted to the investigation of the kinematics and stellar populations
of late-type spirals, a relatively unexplored field. The SAURON spectral
range allows the measurement of the Lick/IDS indices Hβ, Fe5015 and
Mgb, which can be used to estimate the stellar population parameters. We
present here the two-dimensional line strength maps for each galaxy.
From the maps, we learn that late-type spiral galaxies tend to have high
Hβ and low Fe5015 and Mgb values, and that the Hβ index has
often a positive gradient over the field, while the metal indices peak
in the central region.
We investigate the relations between the central line strength indices
and their correlations with morphological type and central velocity
dispersion, and compare the observed behaviour with that for
ellipticals, lenticulars and early-type spirals from the SAURON survey.
We find that our galaxies lie below the Mg-σ relation determined
for elliptical galaxies and that the indices show a clear trend with
morphological type.
From the line strength maps we calculate age, metallicity and abundance
ratio maps via a comparison with model predictions; we discuss the
results from a one-SSP (single stellar population) approach and from a
two-SSP approach, considering the galaxy as a superposition of an old
(~13 Gyr) and a younger (age <=5 Gyr) population. We confirm that
late-type galaxies are generally younger and more metal-poor than
ellipticals and have abundance ratios closer to solar values. We also
explore a continuous star formation scenario, and try to recover the
star formation history using the evolutionary models of Bruzual &
Charlot, assuming constant or exponentially declining star formation
rate. In this last case, fixing the galaxy age to 10 Gyr, we find a
correlation between the e-folding time-scale τ of the starburst and
the central velocity dispersion, in the sense that more massive galaxies
tend to have shorter τ, suggesting that the star formation happened
long ago and has now basically ended, while for smaller objects with
larger values of τ it is still active now.