The CALIFA survey across the Hubble sequence Spatially resolved stellar population properties in galaxies?
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Publication date
2015Metadata
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González Delgado, R. M.
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The CALIFA survey across the Hubble sequence Spatially resolved stellar population properties in galaxies?
Author
- González Delgado, R. M.;
- García Benito, R.;
- Pérez, E.;
- Cid Fernandes, R.;
- Amorim, A. de;
- Cortijo Ferrero, C.;
- Lacerda, E.;
- López Fernández, R.;
- Vale Asari, N.;
- Sánchez, F.;
- Mollá, M.;
- Ruiz Lara, T.;
- Sánchez Blázquez, P.;
- Walcher, C.;
- Alves, J.;
- Aguerri, J.;
- Bekeraité, S.;
- Bland Hawthorn, J.;
- Galbany, Lluis;
- Gallazzi, A.;
- Husemann, B.;
- Iglesias Páramo, J.;
- Kalinova, V.;
- López Sánchez, Ángel R.;
- Marino, R.;
- Márquez, I.;
- Masegosa, J.;
- Mast, D.;
- Méndez Abreu, J.;
- Mendoza, A.;
- Olmo, A. del;
- Pérez, I.;
- Quirrenbach, A.;
- Zibetti, Stefano;
Abstract
Various di erent physical processes contribute to the star formation and stellar mass assembly histories of galaxies. One important approach to
understanding the significance of these di erent processes on galaxy evolution is the study of the stellar population content of today’s galaxies
in a spatially resolved manner. The aim of this paper is to characterize in detail the radial structure of stellar population properties of galaxies
in the nearby universe, based on a uniquely large galaxy sample, considering the quality and coverage of the data. The sample under study was
drawn from the CALIFA survey and contains 300 galaxies observed with integral field spectroscopy. These cover a wide range of Hubble types,
from spheroids to spiral galaxies, while stellar masses range from M? 109 to 7 1011 M . We apply the fossil record method based on spectral
synthesis techniques to recover the following physical properties for each spatial resolution element in our target galaxies: the stellar mass surface
density ( ?), stellar extinction (AV ), light-weighted and mass-weighted ages (hlog ageiL, hlog ageiM), and mass-weighted metallicity (hlog Z?iM).
To study mean trends with overall galaxy properties, the individual radial profiles are stacked in seven bins of galaxy morphology (E, S0, Sa, Sb,
Sbc, Sc, and Sd). We confirm that more massive galaxies are more compact, older, more metal rich, and less reddened by dust. Additionally, we
find that these trends are preserved spatially with the radial distance to the nucleus. Deviations from these relations appear correlated with Hubble
type: earlier types are more compact, older, and more metal rich for a given M?, which is evidence that quenching is related to morphology, but
not driven by mass. Negative gradients of hlog ageiL are consistent with an inside-out growth of galaxies, with the largest hlog ageiL gradients in
Sb–Sbc galaxies. Further, the mean stellar ages of disks and bulges are correlated and with disks covering a wider range of ages, and late-type
spirals hosting younger disks. However, age gradients are only mildly negative or flat beyond R 2 HLR (half light radius), indicating that star
formation is more uniformly distributed or that stellar migration is important at these distances. The gradients in stellar mass surface density depend
mostly on stellar mass, in the sense that more massive galaxies are more centrally concentrated. Whatever sets the concentration indices of galaxies
obviously depends less on quenching/morphology than on the depth of the potential well. There is a secondary correlation in the sense that at the
same M? early-type galaxies have steeper gradients. The ? gradients outside 1 HLR show no dependence on Hubble type.We find mildly negative
hlog Z?iM gradients, which are shallower than predicted from models of galaxy evolution in isolation. In general, metallicity gradients depend on
stellar mass, and less on morphology, hinting that metallicity is a ected by both – the depth of the potential well and morphology/quenching.
Thus, the largest hlog Z?iM gradients occur in Milky Way-like Sb–Sbc galaxies, and are similar to those measured above the Galactic disk. Sc
spirals show flatter hlog Z?iM gradients, possibly indicating a larger contribution from secular evolution in disks. The galaxies from the sample
have decreasing-outward stellar extinction; all spirals show similar radial profiles, independent from the stellar mass, but redder than E and S0.
Overall, we conclude that quenching processes act in manners that are independent of mass, while metallicity and galaxy structure are influenced
by mass-dependent processes
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad
AYA2010-15081
Junta de Andalucia
FQ1580
AYA2010-22111-C03-03
AYA2010-10904E
PEX2011-FQM7058
Viabilidad, Diseno, Acceso y Mejora
ICTS-2009-10
CAPES
CNPq
CNPq (Brazil) through Programa Ciencia sem Fronteiras
401452/2012-3
EU
n.267251
PCIG12-GA-2012-326466
Marie Curie Career Integration Grant
303912
Guillermo Haro program at INAOE
Ministry of Economy, Development, and Tourism's Millennium Science Initiative
IC120009
CONICYT through FONDECYT
3140566
Spanish MINECO
AYA2010-21887-C04-01
Spanish program of International Campus of Excellence Moncloa (CEI)
European Research Council
AYA2013-42227-P
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/135919
DOI: DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201525938
ISSN: 1432-0746
Quote Item
A&A 581, A103 (2015)
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Chile
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