Bibcode
Bureau, Martin; Jeong, Hyunjin; Yi, Sukyoung K.; Schawinski, Kevin; Houghton, Ryan C. W.; Davies, Roger L.; Bacon, Roland; Cappellari, Michele; de Zeeuw, P. Tim; Emsellem, Eric; Falcón-Barroso, J.; Krajnović, Davor; Kuntschner, Harald; McDermid, Richard M.; Peletier, Reynier F.; Sarzi, Marc; Sohn, Young-Jong; Thomas, Daniel; van den Bosch, Remco C. E.; van de Ven, Glenn
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 414, Issue 3, pp. 1887-1902.
Advertised on:
7
2011
Citations
30
Refereed citations
25
Description
Using far-ultraviolet (FUV) and near-ultraviolet (NUV) photometry from
guest investigator programmes on the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)
satellite, optical photometry from the MDM Observatory and optical
integral-field spectroscopy from SAURON, we explore the UV-line-strength
relations of the 48 nearby early-type galaxies in the SAURON sample.
Identical apertures are used for all quantities, avoiding aperture
mismatch. We show that galaxies with purely old stellar populations show
well-defined correlations of the integrated FUV -V and FUV - NUV colours
with the integrated Mg b and Hβ absorption line-strength indices,
strongest for FUV - NUV. Correlations with the NUV -V colour, Fe5015
index and stellar velocity dispersion σ are much weaker. These
correlations put stringent constraints on the origin of the UV-upturn
phenomenon in early-type galaxies and highlight its dependence on age
and metallicity. In particular, despite recent debate, we recover the
negative correlation between FUV -V colour and Mg line strength
originally publicized by Burstein et al., which we refer to as the
'Burstein relation', suggesting a positive dependence of the UV upturn
on metallicity. We argue that the scatter in the correlations is real
and present mild evidence that a strong UV excess is preferentially
present in slow-rotating galaxies. We also demonstrate that most
outliers in the correlations are galaxies with current or recent star
formation, some at very low levels. We believe that this sensitivity to
weak star formation, afforded by the deep and varied data available for
the SAURON sample, explains why our results are occasionally at odds
with other recent but shallower surveys. This is supported by the
analysis of a large, carefully crafted sample of more distant early-type
galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), more easily
comparable with current and future large surveys.
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