Published March 2001 | Version public
Journal Article

The evolutionary history of early-type galaxies as derived from the fundamental plane

  • 1. ROR icon Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 3. ROR icon National Observatory

Abstract

The fundamental plane (FP) scaling relations and their evolution are a powerful tool for studying the global properties of early-type galaxies and their evolutionary history. The form of the FP, as derived by surveys in the local Universe at wavelengths ranging from the U to the K band, cannot be explained by metallicity variations alone among early-type galaxies; systematic variations in age, dark matter content, or homology breaking are required. A large-scale study of early-type galaxies at 0.1 < z < 0.6demonstrates that the SB intercept of the FP, the rest frame (U-V) colour, and the absorption line strengths all evolve passively, thereby implying a high mean formation redshift for the stellar content. The slope of the FP evolves with redshift, which is broadly consistent with systematic age effects occurring along the early-type galaxy sequence. The implication that the least luminous early-type galaxies formed later than the luminous galaxies is discussed in the context of the evolution of thecolour–magnitude relation, the Butcher–Oemler effect and hierarchical galaxy formation models.

Additional Information

© 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers. MAP was supported by Hubble Fellowship grant HF-01099.01-97A from STScI (which is operated by AURA under NASA contract NAS5-26555) and by a grant from the conference organizers.

Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
97368
DOI
10.1023/A:1017528430583
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20190723-153557859

Related works

Funding

NASA Hubble Fellowship
HF-01099.01-97A
NASA
NAS5-26555

Dates

Created
2019-07-23
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Updated
2021-11-16
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