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Large and small elliptical galaxies

HI in Elliptical Galaxies

Elaine M. Sadler, PASA, 14 (1), 45.

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Large and small elliptical galaxies

Figure 1 shows the local optical luminosity function for elliptical and S0 galaxies (Sadler 1982). Although galaxies with (B-band) absolute magnitudes fainter than Mtex2html_wrap_inline128 = -18 (for Htex2html_wrap_inline130 = 100 km stex2html_wrap_inline132 Mpctex2html_wrap_inline132) make up only about 10% of most optically-selected samples of elliptical galaxies, their true space density is higher than that of the giant ellipticals.

Several properties of elliptical galaxies appear to change at an absolute magnitude around Mtex2html_wrap_inline136 Large elliptical galaxies (defined here as those with Mtex2html_wrap_inline138 brighter than -19) are usually dominated by an old stellar population (e.g. Bressan et al. 1996), and have most of their gas in a hot X-ray corona (Forman et al. 1985; Canizares et al. 1987). Small elliptical galaxiesgif (Mtex2html_wrap_inline138 fainter than -18) are less well-studied, partly because they are severely under-represented in magnitude-limited galaxy catalogues, but there are strong hints that many of them contain significant amounts of HI (Lake & Schommer 1984) and are still forming stars (Phillips et al. 1986). There are other differences too -- active nuclei are common in the large ellipticals and rare or non-existent in the small ones (e.g. Sadler & Slee 1994); and most large ellipticals have little or no stellar rotation, while many small ones are rotationally flattened (Davies et al. 1983). Since there are many qualitative differences between large and small ellipticals, it is intriguing that their photometric properties define a continuous family. It is usually impossible to tell, based on the light profile alone, whether an individual elliptical galaxy is distant and luminous or nearby and small.

б figure19
Figure 1: The local optical luminosity function for a combined sample of elliptical and S0 galaxies (points), and for elliptical galaxies alone (solid line). Since elliptical galaxies with dust lanes or other `peculiar' features are often classified as S0s, the true space density of ellipticals probably lies somewhere between the two sets of points. The faint end of the luminosity function is not well defined for field galaxies, but studies of nearby clusters (Binggeli et al. 1988) suggest that it turns over near Mtex2html_wrap_inline146.


Next Section: HI in small elliptical
Title/Abstract Page: HI in Elliptical Galaxies
Previous Section: Introduction
Contents Page: Volume 14, Number 1

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