New clues to the evolution of dwarf early-type galaxies

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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12 pages, 8 Postscript figures, accepted to MNRAS

Scientific paper

10.1046/j.1365-8711.2002.05170.x

Surface photometry of 18 Virgo cluster dwarf elliptical (dE) and dwarf lenticular (dS0) galaxies, made by Gavazzi et al. (2001) in the H-band (1.65 micron) and in the B-band (0.44 micron), shows that the ratio of the effective radii of these stellar systems in the B- and H-band, r_{e B}/r_{e H}, ranges between 0.7 and 2.2. In particular, dwarf ellipticals and lenticulars with a red total color index B-H (i.e. with 3.2 < B-H < 4) have equal effective radii in these two pass-bands. By contrast, blue (i.e. with 2.5 < B-H < 3.1) dEs and dS0s have B-band effective radii about 50% longer than the H-band ones, on average. Consistently, strong negative gradients in B-H along the galactocentric radius are found to be associated with blue total colors. This trend is not found in a sample of 29 giant E and S0 galaxies of the Coma cluster with analogous data available in the literature. These early-type giants span a broad range in r_{e B}/r_{e H} (0.2--2.2), with a mean r_{e B}/r_{e H} of about 1.1, but a narrow range in (red) color (3.3 < B-H < 4.2). In these stellar systems, color gradients are usually interpreted as due either to age/metallicity gradients along the radial coordinate or to dust attenuation, whatever the total color of the system is. Assuming each of these three distinct interpretations of the origin of color gradients, we discuss the origin of the association of strong negative color gradients with blue colors found in the early-type dwarfs under study, in relation with current scenarios of formation and evolution of dE and dS0 galaxies.

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