The centers of early-type galaxies with hubble space telescope. VI. Bimodal central surface brightness profiles

Tod R. Lauer, Karl Gebhardt, S. M. Faber, Douglas Richstone, Scott Tremaine, John Kormendy, M. C. Aller, Ralf Bender, Alan Dressler, Alexei V. Filippenko, Richard Green, Luis C. Ho

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

198 Scopus citations

Abstract

We combine several HST investigations on the central structure of early-type galaxies to generate a large sample of surface photometry. The studies selected were those that used the "Nuker law" to characterize the inner light distributions of the galaxies. The sample comprises WFPC1 and WFPC2 V-band observations published earlier by our group, R-band WFPC2 photometry of Rest et al., NICMOS H-band photometry by Ravindranath et al. and Quillen et al., and the brightest cluster galaxy WFPC2 I-band photometry of Laine et al. The distribution of the logarithmic slopes of the central brightness profiles strongly affirms that the central structure of elliptical galaxies with MV < -19 is bimodal, based on both parametric and nonparametric analysis. At the HST resolution limit, most galaxies are either power-law systems, which have steep cusps in surface brightness, or core systems, which have shallow cusps interior to a steeper envelope brightness distribution. A rapid transition between the two forms occurs over the luminosity range -22 < MV < -20, with cores dominating at the highest luminosities and power laws at the lowest. There are a few "intermediate" systems that have both cusp slopes and total luminosities that fall within the core/power-law transition, but they are rare and do not fill in the overall bimodal distribution.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)226-256
Number of pages31
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume664
Issue number1 I
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 20 2007

Scopus Subject Areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

Keywords

  • Galaxies: nuclei
  • Galaxies: photometry
  • Galaxies: structure

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