Colors and color gradients in bulges of galaxies

Balcells, Marc; Peletier, Reynier F.
Bibliographical reference

The Astronomical Journal, vol. 107, no. 1, p. 135-152

Advertised on:
1
1994
Number of authors
2
IAC number of authors
0
Citations
143
Refereed citations
116
Description
We have obtained surface photometry in U, B, R, and I for a complete optically selected sample of 45 early-type spiral galaxies, to investigate the colors and color gradients of spiral bulges. Color profiles in U-R, B-R, U-B, and R-I have been determined in wedges opening on the semiminor axes. Based on several criteria, like the smoothness of the color profiles, the absence of dust lanes, and the central colors, we have defined a subsample of 18 objects whose colors are largely unaffected by dust. We believe such colors are suitable for inferring properties of the stellar populations of bulges. We find that the colors of bulges are predominantly bluer than those of ellipticals. This result holds even when bulges are compared to ellipticals of the same luminosity, and indicates that bulges are younger and/or more metal poor than old elliptical galaxies. Most bulges do not reach solar metallicities. Bulges show predominantly negative color gradients (bluer outward). For bright bulges (MBulgeR is less than -20.0), the magnitude of the gradient increases with bulge luminosity. For fainter bulges, gradients scatter around large negative values. The behavior of color gradients as a function of bulge luminosity suggests different formation mechanisms for faint and bright spheroids. For bright bulges, the scaling of gradients with luminosity suggests a formation process involving dissipation. The similarity with ellipticals suggests that the formation of the disk did not affect the stellar populations of the bulge in a major way. For small bulges (MR is greater than -20), the existence of pronounced color gradients suggests a different formation mechanism. For these objects, the presence of the disk may have severely affected the radial population distribution in the bulge.