The Morphologies and Gas Content of Red Mergers

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

Scientific paper

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Scientific paper

Mergers between red galaxies are observed to be common in the nearby Universe, but the nature of their colors is not yet well determined; the red colors could be due to either older stellar populations in early-type galaxies and/or dust associated with (obscured) star formation. Ground-based images lack the required resolution to distinguish between these two hypotheses, but the problem is resolved with HST. We present HST/ACS
and WFPC2 observations of a sample of 31 E/S0 red-sequence galaxies at z 0.1, containing undisturbed galaxies, merger remnants, and ongoing mergers. Nearly all galaxies have early-type morphologies and are well-fit by r1/4 law profiles. The amount of cold gas is calculated from the mean color-excess, assuming a simple relation between gas mass and dust mass. We find that 90% of the galaxies exhibit no visible dust signatures, while 10% have detectable dust. The gas-to-stellar mass ratio is low for all galaxies, including the three with detected dust, where Mgas/Mstellar < 0.001. We infer that red mergers in the nearby Universe involve mostly early-type galaxies containing very little cold gas and dust.

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