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

200 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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