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arXiv:1509.05236 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

The HI Tully-Fisher Relation of Early-Type Galaxies

Milan den Heijer, Tom A. Oosterloo, Paolo Serra, Gyula I. G. Jozsa, Juergen Kerp, Raffaella Morganti, Michele Cappellari, Timothy A. Davis, Pierre-Alain Duc, Eric Emsellem, Davor Krajnovic, Richard M. McDermid, Torsten Naab, Anne-Marie Weijmans, P. Tim de Zeeuw

Published 2015-09-17Version 1

We study the HI K-band Tully-Fisher relation and the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation for a sample of 16 early-type galaxies, taken from the ATLAS3D sample, which all have very regular HI disks extending well beyond the optical body (> 5 R_eff). We use the kinematics of these disks to estimate the circular velocity at large radii for these galaxies. We find that the Tully-Fisher relation for our early-type galaxies is offset by about 0.5-0.7 magnitudes from the relation for spiral galaxies. The residuals with respect to the spiral Tully-Fisher relation correlate with estimates of the stellar mass-to-light ratio, suggesting that the offset between the relations is mainly driven by differences in stellar populations. We also observe a small offset between our Tully-Fisher relation with the relation derived for the ATLAS3D sample based on CO data representing the galaxies' inner regions (< 1 R_eff). This indicates that the circular velocities at large radii are systematically 10% lower than those near 0.5-1 R_eff, in line with recent determinations of the shape of the mass profile of early-type galaxies. The baryonic Tully-Fisher relation of our sample is distinctly tighter than the standard one, in particular when using mass-to-light ratios based on dynamical models of the stellar kinematics. We find that the early-type galaxies fall on the spiral baryonic Tully-Fisher relation if one assumes M/L_K = 0.54 M_sun/L_sun for the stellar populations of the spirals, a value similar to that found by recent studies of the dynamics of spiral galaxies. Such a mass-to-light ratio for spiral galaxies would imply that their disks are 60-70% of maximal. Our analysis increases the range of galaxy morphologies for which the baryonic Tully-Fisher relations holds, strengthening previous claims that it is a more fundamental scaling relation than the classical Tully-Fisher relation.

Comments: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Journal: A&A, 581 (2015) A98
Categories: astro-ph.GA
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