Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group: metallicity distribution functions and population gradients

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group: metallicity distribution functions and population gradients. / Lianou, S.; Grebel, E.K.; Koch, Andreas.
In: Astronomy and Astrophysics, Vol. 521, A43, 19.10.2010.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Lianou S, Grebel EK, Koch A. Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group: metallicity distribution functions and population gradients. Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2010 Oct 19;521:A43. doi: 10.1051/0004-6361/200913364

Author

Lianou, S. ; Grebel, E.K. ; Koch, Andreas. / Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group : metallicity distribution functions and population gradients. In: Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2010 ; Vol. 521.

Bibtex

@article{785f3fdf20894e05a9bc8b69f8bd17c2,
title = "Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group: metallicity distribution functions and population gradients",
abstract = "Aims. We study the dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the nearby M 81 group in order to construct their photometric metallicity distributions and to investigate the potential presence of population gradients. We select all the dwarf spheroidals with available Hubble Space Telescope / Advanced Camera for Surveys archival observations, nine in total.Methods. We interpolate isochrones so as to assign a photometric metallicity to each star within a selection box in the color-magnitude diagram of each dwarf galaxy. We assume that the dwarf spheroidals contain mainly an old stellar population. In order to search for metallicity gradients, we examine the spatial distribution of two stellar populations that we separate according to their metallicities.Results. As a result, we present the photometric metallicity distribution functions, the cumulative histograms and smoothed density maps of the metal-poor and metal-rich stars as well as of the intermediate-age stars.Conclusions. From our photometric data we find that all the dwarf spheroidals show a wide range in metallicities, with mean values that are typical for old and metal-poor systems, with the exception of one dwarf spheroidal, namely IKN. Some of our dwarf spheroidals exhibit characteristics of transition-type dwarfs. Compared to the Local Group transition type dwarfs, the M 81 group ones appear to have mean metallicity values slightly more metal-rich at a given luminosity. All the dwarf spheroidals considered here appear to exhibit either population gradients or spatial variations in the centroids of their metal-poor and metal-rich population. In addition, there are luminous AGB stars detected in all of them with spatial distributions suggesting that they are well mixed with the old stars.",
author = "S. Lianou and E.K. Grebel and Andreas Koch",
year = "2010",
month = oct,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1051/0004-6361/200913364",
language = "English",
volume = "521",
journal = "Astronomy and Astrophysics",
issn = "1432-0746",
publisher = "EDP Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dwarf spheroidals in the M81 Group

T2 - metallicity distribution functions and population gradients

AU - Lianou, S.

AU - Grebel, E.K.

AU - Koch, Andreas

PY - 2010/10/19

Y1 - 2010/10/19

N2 - Aims. We study the dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the nearby M 81 group in order to construct their photometric metallicity distributions and to investigate the potential presence of population gradients. We select all the dwarf spheroidals with available Hubble Space Telescope / Advanced Camera for Surveys archival observations, nine in total.Methods. We interpolate isochrones so as to assign a photometric metallicity to each star within a selection box in the color-magnitude diagram of each dwarf galaxy. We assume that the dwarf spheroidals contain mainly an old stellar population. In order to search for metallicity gradients, we examine the spatial distribution of two stellar populations that we separate according to their metallicities.Results. As a result, we present the photometric metallicity distribution functions, the cumulative histograms and smoothed density maps of the metal-poor and metal-rich stars as well as of the intermediate-age stars.Conclusions. From our photometric data we find that all the dwarf spheroidals show a wide range in metallicities, with mean values that are typical for old and metal-poor systems, with the exception of one dwarf spheroidal, namely IKN. Some of our dwarf spheroidals exhibit characteristics of transition-type dwarfs. Compared to the Local Group transition type dwarfs, the M 81 group ones appear to have mean metallicity values slightly more metal-rich at a given luminosity. All the dwarf spheroidals considered here appear to exhibit either population gradients or spatial variations in the centroids of their metal-poor and metal-rich population. In addition, there are luminous AGB stars detected in all of them with spatial distributions suggesting that they are well mixed with the old stars.

AB - Aims. We study the dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the nearby M 81 group in order to construct their photometric metallicity distributions and to investigate the potential presence of population gradients. We select all the dwarf spheroidals with available Hubble Space Telescope / Advanced Camera for Surveys archival observations, nine in total.Methods. We interpolate isochrones so as to assign a photometric metallicity to each star within a selection box in the color-magnitude diagram of each dwarf galaxy. We assume that the dwarf spheroidals contain mainly an old stellar population. In order to search for metallicity gradients, we examine the spatial distribution of two stellar populations that we separate according to their metallicities.Results. As a result, we present the photometric metallicity distribution functions, the cumulative histograms and smoothed density maps of the metal-poor and metal-rich stars as well as of the intermediate-age stars.Conclusions. From our photometric data we find that all the dwarf spheroidals show a wide range in metallicities, with mean values that are typical for old and metal-poor systems, with the exception of one dwarf spheroidal, namely IKN. Some of our dwarf spheroidals exhibit characteristics of transition-type dwarfs. Compared to the Local Group transition type dwarfs, the M 81 group ones appear to have mean metallicity values slightly more metal-rich at a given luminosity. All the dwarf spheroidals considered here appear to exhibit either population gradients or spatial variations in the centroids of their metal-poor and metal-rich population. In addition, there are luminous AGB stars detected in all of them with spatial distributions suggesting that they are well mixed with the old stars.

U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/200913364

DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/200913364

M3 - Journal article

VL - 521

JO - Astronomy and Astrophysics

JF - Astronomy and Astrophysics

SN - 1432-0746

M1 - A43

ER -