Stellar populations of kinematically decoupled cores in E/S0 galaxies

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 2:S235 (2006) 122

Authors:

RM McDermid, E Emsellem, KL Shapiro, R Bacon, M Bureau, M Cappellari, RL Davies, T De Zeeuw, J Falcón-Barroso, D Krajnovíc, H Kuntschner, RF Peletier, M Sarzi

Abstract:

In this poster contribution, we present results from high spatial resolution integral-field spectroscopy of elliptical (E) and lenticular (S0) galaxies from the SAURON representative survey, obtained with the OASIS and GMOS spectrographs. These seeing-limited observations explore the central 10'10 (typically one kiloparsec diameter) regions of these galaxies using a spatial sampling four times higher than SAURON (027 vs. 094 spatial elements), resulting in almost a factor of two improvement in the median PSF. These data allow accurate study of the central regions to complement the large-scale view provided by SAURON. We derive the stellar and gas kinematics, stellar absorption-line strengths and nebular emission-line strengths for our sample, and derive maps of the luminosity-weighted stellar age, metallicity and abundance ratio via stellar population models. From these data we find a wealth of structures either not seen or poorly resolved in the SAURON data, including a number of kinematically-decoupled cores (KDCs) in the centres of some galaxies. We compare the intrinsic size and luminosity-weighted stellar age of all the visible KDCs in the full SAURON sample, and find two types of components: kiloparsec-scale KDCs, which are older than 8 Gyr, and are found in galaxies with little net rotation; and compact KDCs, which have intrinsic diameters of less than a few hundred parsec, show a range of stellar ages from 0.5 - 15 Gyr (with 5/6 younger than 5 Gyr), are found exclusively in fast-rotating galaxies, and are close to counter-rotating around the same axis as their host. Of the 7 galaxies in the SAURON sample with integrated luminosity-weighted ages less than 5 Gyr, 5 show such compact KDCs, suggesting a link between counter-rotation and recent star-formation. We show that this may be partly due to a combination of small sample size at young ages, and an observational bias, since young KDCs are easier to detect than their older and/or co-rot ating counterparts.

A very brief description of LOFAR – the Low Frequency Array

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2:14 (2006) 386-387

Authors:

Heino D Falcke, Michiel P van Haarlem, A Ger de Bruyn, Robert Braun, Huub JA Röttgering, Benjamin Stappers, Wilfried HWM Boland, Harvey R Butcher, Eugène J de Geus, Leon V Koopmans, Robert P Fender, H Jan ME Kuijpers, George K Miley, Richard T Schilizzi, Corina Vogt, Ralph AMJ Wijers, Michael W Wise, Willem N Brouw, Johan P Hamaker, Jan E Noordam, Thomas Oosterloo, Lars Bähren, Michiel A Brentjens, Stefan J Wijnholds, Jaap D Bregman, Wim A van Cappellen, André W Gunst, GW Kant, Jan Reitsma, Kjeld van der Schaaf, Cornelis M de Vos

Extraplanar gas and magnetic fields in the cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4569

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2:S237 (2006) 470-470

Authors:

S Ryś, KT Chyży, M Weżgowiec, M Ehle, R Beck

First e-VLBI observations of GRS 1915+105

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2:S238 (2006) 437-438

Authors:

A Rushton, RE Spencer, M Strong, RM Campbell, S Casey, RP Fender, MA Garrett, JCA Miller-Jones, GG Pooley, C Reynolds, A Szomoru, V Tudose, Z Paragi

Star Formation in Nearby Early-Type Galaxies: Mapping in UV, Optical and CO

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2:S235 (2006) 304-304

Authors:

M Bureau, R Bacon, M Cappellari, F Combes, RL Davies, PT de Zeeuw, E Emsellem, J Falcón-Barroso, H Jeong, D Krajnović, H Kuntschner, RM McDermid, RF Peletier, M Sarzi, KL Shapiro, G van de Ven, SK Yi, LM Young