Stellar population results from NFPS: Age and Metallicity along the Red Sequence

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Stellar population results from NFPS: Age and Metallicity along the Red Sequence Russell Smith (Waterloo), Jenica Nelan (Dartmouth), Mike Hudson (Waterloo), Steve Moore (Durham), Stephen Quinney (Durham), John Lucey (Durham), Gary Wegner (Dartmouth), David Schade (CADC), Justin Malecki (Waterloo), Jonathan Ford (Waterloo), Jeff Stevenson (Waterloo), Nick Suntzeff (CTIO)

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Stellar population results from NFPS:Age and Metallicity along the Red

Sequence

Russell Smith (Waterloo), Jenica Nelan (Dartmouth), Mike Hudson (Waterloo), Steve Moore (Durham), Stephen Quinney (Durham), John Lucey (Durham), Gary Wegner (Dartmouth), David Schade (CADC), Justin Malecki (Waterloo), Jonathan Ford (Waterloo), Jeff Stevenson (Waterloo), Nick Suntzeff (CTIO)

NFPS Primer

Aims:

Cosmic flows

measure large-scale bulk flow at 150 h-1 Mpc with random, systematic and sampling errors < 100 km/s via FP measurements of an all-sky sample of ~100 nearby (z < 0.06) rich clusters

Early-type galaxy properties in clusters

benchmark sample of ~4000 galaxies with very high quality, homogenous photometric and spectroscopic data

Supported through NOAO Survey Program (50+ 4m nights) hence the NOAO FP Survey (NFPS)

Smith et al. 2004, AJ, 128, 1558 (NFPS-I)

Nelan et al. 2005, AJ, in press (NFPS-II)

• R and B band • FOV 40’ - 1 degree (CTIO

4m MOSAIC; KPNO 4m/0.9m MOSAIC; CFH12k)

• Seeing <~1 arcsec; better for more distant clusters (CTIO/CFHT)

• FP photometric parameters (Re, SBe)

• Morphologies (bulge/disk decomposition with GIM2D)

• Spectroscopy follow-up for 30-70 colour-magnitude selected cluster members

• WIYN 3.5m+HYDRA CTIO 4m+HYDRA, 2+ hours per field• FWHM 3Å; Median S/N is only 22 per Å (but we have ~4000!) • Overlap and multiple observations (crucial)• Redshifts, velocity dispersions, linestrength indices

SpectroscopySpectroscopy

PhotometryPhotometry

Red Sequence of Cluster Galaxies

Red-sequence galaxies dominate the stellar content of rich clusters ….

Is the red-sequence a sequence of age or metallicity?

Thomas et al. (2005)

Typical literature results for early-type galaxies

Co-added spectra, binned by sigma to S/N ~ 200 @ 5000A

Co-added NFPS red-sequence spectra

Co-added spectra binned by sigma to S/N ~200 demonstrate the impressive regularity of the stellar populations of cluster red-sequence galaxies.

All absorption-line indices show significant variations with sigma

Usual trends seen.Balmer lines negative, all others positive.

(Emission-line galaxies excluded)

Average in five bins.

Sigma trends

Best fit (solid lines). Predictions from our derived solution (dashed lines).

Grids:

Thomas et al. alpha-enhanced “single stellar population” (SSP) models account for non-solar chemical abundances.

Squares = binned NFPS values (each the average of ~700 galaxies), size increases with sigma value.

Initial comparison with the Thomas et al. models

Increasing age, [Z/H], [/Fe] with increasing σ

Grid Inversion MethodThomas et al. models predict variations of each linestrength index with age, [Z/H], [a/Fe] for each binned data point.

Note errors on binned points.

Thick lines show the average relations.

Shaded regions indicate the maximum internal scatter.

Scaling Relationships for the Red Sequence

Simultaneous comparison of slopes of 12 linestrength-index vs sigma relations to models ….

… yields mean age, [Z/H], [a/Fe] variations for nuclear regions along the red-sequence. (red lines)

Age ~ σ 0.67 ± 0.15

[Z/H] ~ σ 0.48 ± 0.05

Fe] ~ σ 0.35 ± 0.05

General trends in good agreement with other work in clusters (Trager et al., Caldwell et al., Thomas et al.) and in groups/field (Proctor et al., Denicolo et al.) but with much greater resolution.

H absorption NFPS sub-sample gives the same result (Smith 2005).

Stars in large galaxies formed early and quickly (high /Fe).

Stars in small galaxies formed, on average, much later.

Simplest interpretation: “down-sizing” onto the red sequence.

De Lucia et al. (2004) data for clusters at z ~ 0.75 shows a 50% deficit of faint (0.1-0.4 L*) red-sequence members which is approximately consistent with our result.

Deficiency of Red Sequence galaxies in high redshift clusters

e.g. GALFORM

filled: B/T > 0.6open: 0.4< B/T < 0.6

Kuntschner et al. 2002

Predicted Age Trends from Models

Field Cluster

Thomas, Maraston & Bender (2002)

Predicted [/Fe] trends from Models

Caveats• Sample selection:

Red, emission-free cluster galaxiesNo selection by morphological type

• Results are for nuclear regions (~ 0.5 kpc)• Ages, metallicities are means of the red-

sequence at a given velocity dispersion assuming a SSP model. This does not necessarily imply that their star formation histories were actually single bursts, e.g. “frosting” model may be able to produce the observed trends.

• Understand star formation history of bulge and disk components

• GALEX, CFHT u*, K-band imaging

• Morphologies from CFHT sub-arcsec imaging

• Environmental effects

• Trends with cluster mass, radius

To Do

Conclusions

From the detailed analysis of ~4000 spectra from red sequence galaxies in low redshift clusters we conclude that:

more massive galaxies on the red sequence are older, have higher overall metallicity, and have higher high [/Fe] than the lower mass galaxies

the red sequence was assembled slowly over cosmic history with the σ ~ 50 km/s galaxies only reaching the red sequence about 4 Gyr ago

these results are incompatible with the generic predictions from the hierarchical galaxy formation models

Results do not depend strongly on morphological type

Map the line strength trends into [/Fe], [Fe/H] and ages, via the Thomas et al. models.

NFPS Primer

•Supported through NOAO Survey Program (50+ nights)

•data collection is now complete

•FP data for 30-70 red-sequence galaxies per cluster (<3% distance errors per cluster) … plus some field ellipticals out to z ~ 0.2.

•provides benchmark sample of ~4000 local cluster E/S0 galaxies with very high quality photometric and spectroscopic data

•the final SDSS sample of local cluster early-type galaxies will only be 1/3 size of NFP and will have poorer

image quality. NFP sample has B/T ratios accurate to ~10%

•an extremely powerful dataset to investigate many key aspects of local cluster early-type (red-sequence) galaxies

• first NFP paper published, Smith et al. 2004, AJ, 128, 1558, second Nelan et al. 2005, in press.