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Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies: clues from the Sculptor group

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Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies: clues from the Sculptor group. / Lianou, S.; Grebel, E.K.; Da Costa, G. S. et al.
In: Astronomy and Astrophysics, Vol. 550, A7, 17.01.2013.

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APA

Lianou, S., Grebel, E. K., Da Costa, G. S., Rejkuba, M., Jerjen, H., & Koch, A. (2013). Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies: clues from the Sculptor group. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 550, Article A7. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201219959

Vancouver

Lianou S, Grebel EK, Da Costa GS, Rejkuba M, Jerjen H, Koch A. Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies: clues from the Sculptor group. Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2013 Jan 17;550:A7. doi: 10.1051/0004-6361/201219959

Author

Lianou, S. ; Grebel, E.K. ; Da Costa, G. S. et al. / Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies : clues from the Sculptor group. In: Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2013 ; Vol. 550.

Bibtex

@article{b7ce0489d5b74120a3e5d726f3c6692b,
title = "Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies: clues from the Sculptor group",
abstract = "Aims. We focus on the resolved stellar populations of one early-type and four transition-type dwarf galaxies in the Sculptor group, with the aim to examine the potential presence of population gradients and place constraints on their mean metallicities.Methods. We use deep Hubble Space Telescope images to construct color–magnitude diagrams, from which we select stellar populations that trace different evolutionary phases in order to constrain their range of ages and metallicities, as well as to examine their spatial distribution. In addition, we use the resolved stars in the red giant branch in order to derive photometric metallicities.Results. All studied dwarfs contain intermediate-age stars with ages of ~1 Gyr and older as traced by the luminous asymptotic giant branch and red clump stars, while the transition-type dwarfs contain also stars younger than ~1 Gyr as traced by a young main sequence and vertical red clump stars. Moreover, the spatial distribution of the stars that trace different evolutionary phases shows a population gradient in all transition-type dwarfs. The derived error-weighted mean metallicities, assuming purely old stellar populations, range from −1.5 dex for ESO294-G010 to −1.9 dex for Scl-dE1, and should be considered as lower limits to their true metallicities. Assuming intermediate-age stellar populations to dominate the dwarfs, we derive upper limits for the metallicities that are 0.3 to 0.2 dex higher than the metallicities derived assuming purely old populations. We discuss how photometric metallicity gradients are affected by the age-metallicity degeneracy, which prevents strong conclusions regarding their actual presence. Finally, the transition-type dwarfs lie beyond the virial radius of their closest bright galaxy, as also observed for the Local Group transition-type dwarfs. Scl-dE1 is the only dwarf spheroidal in our sample and is an outlier in a potential morphology-distance relation, similar as the two isolated dwarf spheroidals of the Local Group, Tucana, and Cetus.",
author = "S. Lianou and E.K. Grebel and {Da Costa}, {G. S.} and M. Rejkuba and H. Jerjen and Andreas Koch",
year = "2013",
month = jan,
day = "17",
doi = "10.1051/0004-6361/201219959",
language = "English",
volume = "550",
journal = "Astronomy and Astrophysics",
issn = "1432-0746",
publisher = "EDP Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Population gradients and photometric metallicities in early- and transition-type dwarf galaxies

T2 - clues from the Sculptor group

AU - Lianou, S.

AU - Grebel, E.K.

AU - Da Costa, G. S.

AU - Rejkuba, M.

AU - Jerjen, H.

AU - Koch, Andreas

PY - 2013/1/17

Y1 - 2013/1/17

N2 - Aims. We focus on the resolved stellar populations of one early-type and four transition-type dwarf galaxies in the Sculptor group, with the aim to examine the potential presence of population gradients and place constraints on their mean metallicities.Methods. We use deep Hubble Space Telescope images to construct color–magnitude diagrams, from which we select stellar populations that trace different evolutionary phases in order to constrain their range of ages and metallicities, as well as to examine their spatial distribution. In addition, we use the resolved stars in the red giant branch in order to derive photometric metallicities.Results. All studied dwarfs contain intermediate-age stars with ages of ~1 Gyr and older as traced by the luminous asymptotic giant branch and red clump stars, while the transition-type dwarfs contain also stars younger than ~1 Gyr as traced by a young main sequence and vertical red clump stars. Moreover, the spatial distribution of the stars that trace different evolutionary phases shows a population gradient in all transition-type dwarfs. The derived error-weighted mean metallicities, assuming purely old stellar populations, range from −1.5 dex for ESO294-G010 to −1.9 dex for Scl-dE1, and should be considered as lower limits to their true metallicities. Assuming intermediate-age stellar populations to dominate the dwarfs, we derive upper limits for the metallicities that are 0.3 to 0.2 dex higher than the metallicities derived assuming purely old populations. We discuss how photometric metallicity gradients are affected by the age-metallicity degeneracy, which prevents strong conclusions regarding their actual presence. Finally, the transition-type dwarfs lie beyond the virial radius of their closest bright galaxy, as also observed for the Local Group transition-type dwarfs. Scl-dE1 is the only dwarf spheroidal in our sample and is an outlier in a potential morphology-distance relation, similar as the two isolated dwarf spheroidals of the Local Group, Tucana, and Cetus.

AB - Aims. We focus on the resolved stellar populations of one early-type and four transition-type dwarf galaxies in the Sculptor group, with the aim to examine the potential presence of population gradients and place constraints on their mean metallicities.Methods. We use deep Hubble Space Telescope images to construct color–magnitude diagrams, from which we select stellar populations that trace different evolutionary phases in order to constrain their range of ages and metallicities, as well as to examine their spatial distribution. In addition, we use the resolved stars in the red giant branch in order to derive photometric metallicities.Results. All studied dwarfs contain intermediate-age stars with ages of ~1 Gyr and older as traced by the luminous asymptotic giant branch and red clump stars, while the transition-type dwarfs contain also stars younger than ~1 Gyr as traced by a young main sequence and vertical red clump stars. Moreover, the spatial distribution of the stars that trace different evolutionary phases shows a population gradient in all transition-type dwarfs. The derived error-weighted mean metallicities, assuming purely old stellar populations, range from −1.5 dex for ESO294-G010 to −1.9 dex for Scl-dE1, and should be considered as lower limits to their true metallicities. Assuming intermediate-age stellar populations to dominate the dwarfs, we derive upper limits for the metallicities that are 0.3 to 0.2 dex higher than the metallicities derived assuming purely old populations. We discuss how photometric metallicity gradients are affected by the age-metallicity degeneracy, which prevents strong conclusions regarding their actual presence. Finally, the transition-type dwarfs lie beyond the virial radius of their closest bright galaxy, as also observed for the Local Group transition-type dwarfs. Scl-dE1 is the only dwarf spheroidal in our sample and is an outlier in a potential morphology-distance relation, similar as the two isolated dwarf spheroidals of the Local Group, Tucana, and Cetus.

U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/201219959

DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/201219959

M3 - Journal article

VL - 550

JO - Astronomy and Astrophysics

JF - Astronomy and Astrophysics

SN - 1432-0746

M1 - A7

ER -