Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy
Scientific paper
Nov 1990
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1990nascp3098...53s&link_type=abstract
In NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center, Paired and Interacting Galaxies: International Astronomical Union Colloquium No. 124 p 53
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astronomy
1
Astronomical Photography, Charge Coupled Devices, Elliptical Galaxies, Galactic Evolution, Morphology, Photometry, Sky Surveys (Astronomy), Spiral Galaxies, Calibrating, Collapse, Errors, Estimating, Isolation, Magnitude, Northern Hemisphere, Red Shift, Telescopes, Weather
Scientific paper
Current theories of galaxy formation imply that environment is the most important factor in deciding whether a collapsing region becomes a spiral galaxy or an elliptical galaxy. If this is the case, then isolated pairs comprising a galaxy of each morphology provide an especially interesting test, since, strictly speaking, they should not exist. The first phase of studying E-S pairs is to define a sample which is genuinely isolated and genuinely E-S. The catalog compiled by Karachentsev is the most useful Northern Hemisphere starting point, containing 603 pairs which obeyed certain well-defined angular isolation criteria. All of these pairs now have velocities, enabling further removal of at least some of the non-physical binaries. The conventional cutoff at 500 km s-1 was used for this purpose. However, the morphological types were estimated from Palomar Sky Survey prints, and are consequently not very accurate. It was therefore decided to obtain good charge coupled device (CCD) images in the B-band of all pairs from the Karachentsev sample which were classified as either E-S (73 pairs) or E-SO (91 pairs), for a total of 164 pairs. This includes the 24 pairs with known redshift differences greater than 500 km s-1 (9 E-S and 15 E-SO), which were also imaged in this survey, not only for completeness but also in case the criteria were later changed, or the redshifts were found to be in error. A total of 198 CCD frames were obtained between February 1986 and the present, with most of the observations being completed by the summer of 1987. A number of missing stragglers and replacements for poor quality images were taken more recently. Most observations used the number 1-0.9m telescope at Kitt Peak, with a few frames from the 2.1m. Some pairs required more than one image due to their separation. The morphological study did not require photometric conditions, but calibrations were made for almost all images anyway, and the weather was probably photometric at least half of the time, at least to an accuracy of around 0.1 magnitudes. The results of this first phase will be published in the form of an Atlas, from which any interested readers will be able to select their own sub-sample using their preferred morphological criteria.
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