Rotationally Supported Virgo Cluster Dwarf Elliptical Galaxies:
Stripped Dwarf Irregular Galaxies?
van Zee, L., Skillman, E. D., & Haynes, M. P. 2004, AJ, 128, 121.
Abstract
New observations of 16 dwarf elliptical galaxies in the Virgo Cluster indicate that
at least seven dEs have significant velocity gradients along their optical major
axis, with typical rotation amplitudes of 20-30 km/s.
Of the remaining nine galaxies in this sample, 6 have velocity gradients less
than 20 km/s kpc-1 while the other 3 observations had too low of a
signal-to-noise ratio to determine an accurate velocity gradient.
Typical velocity dispersions for these galaxies are ~44 +/- 5 km/s,
indicating that rotation can be a significant component of the stellar dynamics
of Virgo dEs. When corrected for the limited spatial extent of the spectral
data, the rotation amplitudes
of the rotating dEs are comparable to those of similar brightness dIs.
Evidence for a relationship between the rotation amplitude and galaxy luminosity
is found, and, in fact, agrees well with the Tully-Fisher relation. The
similarity in the scaling relations of dIs and dEs implies that it is unlikely
that dEs evolve from significantly more luminous galaxies.
These observations reaffirm the possibility that some cluster dwarf elliptical galaxies
may be formed when the neutral gaseous medium is stripped from dwarf irregular
galaxies in the cluster environment.
We hypothesize that several different mechanisms are involved in the creation of
the overall population of dE galaxies, and that stripping of infalling dIs
may be the dominant process in the creation of dEs in clusters like Virgo.
ADS abstract
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