Bibcode
Reda, Fatma M.; Forbes, Duncan A.; Beasley, M. A.; O'Sullivan, Ewan J.; Goudfrooij, Paul
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 354, Issue 3, pp. 851-869.
Advertised on:
11
2004
Citations
75
Refereed citations
71
Description
Isolated galaxies are important because they probe the lowest density
regimes inhabited by galaxies. We define a sample of 36 nearby isolated
early-type galaxies for further study. Our isolation criteria require
them to have no comparable-mass neighbours within 2 B-band magnitudes,
0.67 Mpc in the plane of the sky and 700 km s-1 in recession
velocity. New wide-field optical imaging of 10 isolated galaxies with
the Anglo-Australian Telescope confirms their early-type morphology and
relative isolation. We also present imaging of four galaxy groups as a
control sample. The isolated galaxies are shown to be more
gravitationally isolated than the group galaxies. We find that the
isolated early-type galaxies have a mean effective colour of
(B-R)e= 1.54 +/- 0.14, similar to their high-density
counterparts. They reveal a similar colour-magnitude relation slope and
small intrinsic scatter to cluster ellipticals. They also follow the
Kormendy relation of surface brightness versus size for luminous cluster
galaxies. Such properties suggest that the isolated galaxies formed at a
similar epoch to cluster galaxies, such that the bulk of their stars are
very old. However, our galaxy modelling reveals evidence for dust lanes,
plumes, shells, boxy and disc isophotes in four out of nine galaxies.
Thus at least some isolated galaxies have experienced a recent
merger/accretion event, which may have induced a small burst of star
formation. We derive luminosity functions for the isolated galaxies and
find a faint slope of -1.2, which is similar to the `universal' slope
found in a wide variety of environments. We examine the number density
distribution of galaxies in the field of the isolated galaxies. Only the
very faintest dwarf galaxies (MR>~-15.5) appear to be
associated with the isolated galaxies, whereas any
intermediate-luminosity galaxies appear to lie in the background.
Finally, we discuss possible formation scenarios for isolated early-type
galaxies. Early epoch formation and a merger/accretion of galaxies are
possible explanations. The collapse of a large, virialized group is an
unlikely explanation, but that of a poor group remains viable.