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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Astrophysics and Astronomy

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San Jose State University

Galaxies: formation

2016

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Sluggs Survey: The Assembly Histories Of Individual Early-Type Galaxies, Duncan Forbes, Aaron Romanowsky, Nicola Pastorello, Caroline Foster, Jean Brodie, Jay Strader, Christopher Usher, Vincenzo Pota Apr 2016

The Sluggs Survey: The Assembly Histories Of Individual Early-Type Galaxies, Duncan Forbes, Aaron Romanowsky, Nicola Pastorello, Caroline Foster, Jean Brodie, Jay Strader, Christopher Usher, Vincenzo Pota

Faculty Publications

Early-type (E and S0) galaxies may have assembled via a variety of different evolutionary pathways. Here, we investigate these pathways by comparing the stellar kinematic properties of 24 early-type galaxies from the SAGES Legacy Unifying Globulars and GalaxieS (SLUGGS) survey with the hydrodynamical simulations of Naab et al. In particular, we use the kinematics of starlight up to 4 effective radii (Re) as diagnostics of galaxy inner and outer regions, and assign each galaxy to one of six Naab et al. assembly classes. The majority of our galaxies (14/24) have kinematic characteristics that indicate an assembly history dominated by gradual …


Discovery Of An Ultra-Diffuse Galaxy In The Pisces-Perseus Supercluster, David Martínez-Delgado, Ronald Läsker, Margarita Sharina, Elisa Toloba, Jürgen Fliri, Rachael Beaton, David Valls-Gabaud, Igor Karachentsev, Taylor Chonis, Eva Grebel, Duncan Forbes, Aaron Romanowsky, J. Gallego-Laborda, Karel Teuwen, M. Gómez-Flechoso, Jie Wang, Puragra Guhathakurta, Serafim Kaisin, Nhung Ho Mar 2016

Discovery Of An Ultra-Diffuse Galaxy In The Pisces-Perseus Supercluster, David Martínez-Delgado, Ronald Läsker, Margarita Sharina, Elisa Toloba, Jürgen Fliri, Rachael Beaton, David Valls-Gabaud, Igor Karachentsev, Taylor Chonis, Eva Grebel, Duncan Forbes, Aaron Romanowsky, J. Gallego-Laborda, Karel Teuwen, M. Gómez-Flechoso, Jie Wang, Puragra Guhathakurta, Serafim Kaisin, Nhung Ho

Faculty Publications

We report the discovery of DGSAT I, an ultra-diffuse, quenched galaxy located 10fdg4 in projection from the Andromeda galaxy (M31). This low-surface brightness galaxy (μV = 24.8 mag arcsec−2), found with a small amateur telescope, appears unresolved in sub-arcsecond archival Subaru/Suprime-Cam images, and hence has been missed by optical surveys relying on resolved star counts, in spite of its relatively large effective radius (Re(V) = 12'') and proximity (15') to the well-known dwarf spheroidal galaxy And II. Its red color (V − I = 1.0), shallow Sérsic index (nV = 0.68), and the absence of detectable Hα emission are typical …


First Results From The Madcash Survey: A Faint Dwarf Galaxy Companion To The Low-Mass Spiral Galaxy Ngc 2403 At 3.2 Mpc*, Jeffrey Carlin, David Sand, Paul Price, Beth Willman, Ananthan Karunakaran, Kristine Spekkens, Eric Bell, Jean Brodie, Denija Crnojević, Duncan Forbes, Jonathan Hargis, Evan Kirby, Robert Lupton, Annika Peter, Aaron Romanowsky, Jay Strader Jan 2016

First Results From The Madcash Survey: A Faint Dwarf Galaxy Companion To The Low-Mass Spiral Galaxy Ngc 2403 At 3.2 Mpc*, Jeffrey Carlin, David Sand, Paul Price, Beth Willman, Ananthan Karunakaran, Kristine Spekkens, Eric Bell, Jean Brodie, Denija Crnojević, Duncan Forbes, Jonathan Hargis, Evan Kirby, Robert Lupton, Annika Peter, Aaron Romanowsky, Jay Strader

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Stellar Populations Across The Black Hole Mass–Velocity Dispersion Relation, Ignacio Martín-Navarro, Jean Brodie, Remco Van Den Bosch, Aaron Romanowsky, Duncan Forbes Jan 2016

Stellar Populations Across The Black Hole Mass–Velocity Dispersion Relation, Ignacio Martín-Navarro, Jean Brodie, Remco Van Den Bosch, Aaron Romanowsky, Duncan Forbes

Faculty Publications

Coevolution between supermassive black holes (BH) and their host galaxies is universally adopted in models for galaxy formation. In the absence of feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGNs), simulated massive galaxies keep forming stars in the local universe. From an observational point of view, however, such coevolution remains unclear. We present a stellar population analysis of galaxies with direct BH mass measurements and the BH mass–σ relation as a working framework. We find that over-massive BH galaxies, i.e., galaxies lying above the best-fitting BH mass–σ line, tend to be older and more α-element-enhanced than under-massive BH galaxies. The scatter in …