Bibcode
Blakeslee, John P.; Vazdekis, A.; Ajhar, Edward A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 320, Issue 2, pp. 193-216.
Fecha de publicación:
1
2001
Número de citas
94
Número de citas referidas
78
Descripción
We investigate the use of surface brightness fluctuations (SBF)
measurements in optical and near-IR bandpasses for both stellar
population and distance studies. New V-band SBF data are reported for
five galaxies in the Fornax cluster and combined with literature data to
define a V-band SBF distance indicator, calibrated against Cepheid
distances to the Leo group and the Virgo and Fornax clusters. The colour
dependence of the V-band SBF indicator is only ~15 per cent steeper than
that found for the I band, and the mean `fluctuation colour' of the
galaxies is ~2.4. We use new stellar population models, based
on the latest Padua isochrones transformed empirically to the
observational plane, to predict optical and near-IR SBF magnitudes and
integrated colours for a wide range of population ages and
metallicities. We examine the sensitivity of the predicted SBF-colour
relations to changes in the isochrones, stellar transformations, and
initial mass function. The new models reproduce fairly well the weak
dependence of V and I SBF in globular clusters on metallicity,
especially if the more metal-rich globulars are younger. Below solar
metallicity, the near-IR SBF magnitudes depend mainly on age, while the
integrated colours depend mainly on metallicity. This could prove a
powerful new approach to the age-metallicity degeneracy problem; near-IR
SBF observations of globular clusters would be an important test of the
models. The models also help in understanding the (V-I) and (I-K)
fluctuation colours of elliptical galaxies, with much less need for
composite stellar populations than in previous models. However, in order
to obtain theoretical calibrations of the SBF distance indicators, we
combine the homogeneous population models into composite models and
select out those ones with fluctuation colours consistent with
observations. We are able to reproduce the observed range of elliptical
galaxy (V-I) colours, the slopes of the V and I SBF distance indicators
against (V-I) (fainter SBF in redder populations), and the flattening of
the I-band relation for (V-I)<~1.0. The models also match the
observed slope of I-band SBF against the Mg2 absorption index
and explain the steep colour dependence found by Ajhar et al. for the
HST/WFPC2 F814W-band SBF measurements. In contrast to previous models,
ours predict that the near-IR SBF magnitudes will also continue to grow
fainter for redder populations. The theoretical V-band SBF zero-point
predicted by these models agrees well with the Cepheid-calibrated V-band
empirical zero-point. However, the model zero-point is 0.15-0.27mag too
faint in the I band and 0.24-0.36mag too faint in K. The zero-points for
the I band (empirically the best determined) would come into close
agreement if the Cepheid distance scale were revised to agree with the
recent dynamical distance measured to NGC 4258. We note that the
theoretical SBF calibrations are sensitive to the uncertain details of
stellar evolution, and conclude that the empirical calibrations remain
more secure. However, the sensitivity of SBF to these finer details
potentially makes it a powerful, relatively unexploited, constraint for
stellar evolution and population synthesis.