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Massimo Capaccioli » 3.Photometry of early-type galaxies


Photometric laws: basic rules of the game

Unless otherwise stated, in this Chapter we will make the following assumptions. For sake of simplicity we will consider galaxies with purely circular, concentric isophotes. More complex and more realistic shapes will be introduced later. Thus, the only coordinate is the radius R, in units of seconds of arc [how do you translate this angular into linear units?].

Note that any galaxy can be circularized by building circular models where, at the same surface brightness level, the isophotes in the real object and in the galaxy have the same area. This is simply done by measuring the area A of an isophote of the real galaxy from where the radius of the corresponding circular isophote in the model is computed as: R_*=\sqrt{A/\pi}.
The star added to the symbol for the radius serves to remember that this quantity is relative to the circular model, that is that it is an “equivalent” radius.

Photometric laws: basic rules of the game

Given the small angular dimension of galaxy images (usually not larger the a few minutes of arc), they are taken to place on a plane rather than on the sphere, as it is the sky [why?]. This prevents us from wild extrapolations of R [why?]. The surface brightness will be considered a continuous function, which is certainly a good guess but for very close objects or small linear dimensions [how small?]. Quite often it will be given relative to some scale length. We have adopted to indicate the projected 2D radii with a capital R, and the spatial 3D radii with a small r.

We shall first comment on the data reduction. We will then present the empirical formulae developed to represent the light profiles of early-type galaxies, then those for spiral disks. The rest of the lecture is devoted to present some parameters used nowadays in studies of very large sample of galaxies.

The tremendous developments of observational equipment has produced, since the last few decades of 1900, extraordinary data-bases with millions of galaxies which must be treated and analyzed by automatic tools and statistical methods. This flow of data has been a genuine revolution in a field where, no more than 30 years ago, a paper would deal usually with no more than a few tens of galaxies at the time.

Elliptical galaxies

Two papers with the photometric techniques and the results of a study of the standard E galaxy NGC 3379. Credit: The Astrophysical Journal.

Two papers with the photometric techniques and the results of a study of the standard E galaxy NGC 3379. Credit: The Astrophysical Journal.


Reynolds-Hubble light profile

The first empirical law describing the trend of the surface brightness in spheroidal galaxies was devised by the British astronomer John H. Reynolds (1874-1949) and then by Hubble (Ap.J., 71, 231, 1930). The normalized Reynolds law writes as:

\frac{I(R)}{I(0)}= \frac{1}{\left(1+R/R_0\right)^2}.

There are no free parameters, since R_0 and I(0) are just scale parameters [explain]. I(0) is the central brightness and R_0 is the radius at which the surface brightness is diminished by a factor of 1/4. The surface intensity I(R) is almost constant for R\ll R_0, thus well mimicking the behavior of the atmospheric blurring (seeing) as we shall see later, and it runs as  R^{-2}   for R\gg R_0.

 

 

Log of the relative intensity in Reynolds-Hubble light profile as a function of the relative distance from the center.

Log of the relative intensity in Reynolds-Hubble light profile as a function of the relative distance from the center.


Reynolds-Hubble light profile

The very center [but does a very center make sense if one relaxes the assumption that a galaxy is a continuous system?] is discontinuous (spiky):

\left(\frac{dI}{dR}\right)_{R=0}\neq 0.

The luminosity at radius R is:

L(R)=2\pi\int_0^R I(R')R'dR'= 2 \pi I(0) R_0^2 [\frac{1}{1 + \frac{R}{R_0}} -1 + \ln (1 + \frac{R}{R_0})]}

As we can see, it diverges as R increases. This does not mean, though, that L(R) tends to infinity with R, since the radius cannot grow indefinitely, as we have said in listing our assumptions.

 

Same as above, for the surface brightness, to be calibrated with a value for c, versus the log of the relative radius.

Same as above, for the surface brightness, to be calibrated with a value for c, versus the log of the relative radius.


Baum light profile

In 1955 (PASP, 83, 199) the Reynolds-Hubble formula was reviewed by William A. Baum in order to match more spiky nuclei. The normalized Baum law writes as:

\frac{I(R)}{I(R_0)}=\frac{2}{R\left(1+R_0\right)}.

Again there are no free parameters, since  R_0  and  I(R_0)  are scale parameters.

Now the surface intensity I(R) raises steadily as R decreases:

R\ll R_0 \rightarrow I(R)=R^{-1}.

Outwards (R\gg R_0) it continues to run as R^{-1}.

At the very center the surface brightness is discontinuous. Actually it diverges for R\rightarrow 0 , as the luminosity L(R) does [solve the integral analytically] when R tends to infinity (with the standard caveat on the limits for the extrapolation of the radius). [Plot the luminosity as a function of the galactocentric radius and compute its gradient to see how difficult it will be to define a quasi-total luminosity for models where, though improperly L(R) diverges.]

Log of the relative intensity in Baum light profile.

Log of the relative intensity in Baum light profile.

Same as above, for the surface brightness.

Same as above, for the surface brightness.


Oemler light profile

In 1976 G. Oemler (Ap.J., 209, 693) proposed an implementation to the Reynolds-Hubble’s formula to account for the occurrence of the so-called tidal truncation of the light profile. To this end he introduced an exponential factor and a free parameter, R_t, where t stays for tidal:

\frac{I(R)}{I(0)}=\frac{1}{1+(R/R_0)^2} \exp{\left(-R^2/R_t^2\right)}.

In this way, for R\ll R_t it is:

I(R)\propto \left(1+R/R_0\right) ^{-2},

while for R\gg R_t the surface brightness vanishes: I(R)\rightarrow 0 .

For R_t=\infty one gets the standard Reynolds-Hubble formula.

Oemler formula for various values of the tidal radius.

Oemler formula for various values of the tidal radius.


The de Vaucouleurs (R1/4) law

The breakthrough in the field came with the thesis work of Gérard de Vaucouleurs (Ann. d’Ap, 11, 247, 1948), who introduced the following formula, often referred to as the R1/4 law:

I(R)=I_0\times 10^{-C\left(R/R_*\right)^{1/4}}.

It has two scale factors, I_0 and R_* , and, as we shall see, no free parameters.

In fact, C can be fixed by properly choosing the scales for R and I. To this end, let us define an “effective radius”  R_e as the isophote radius that encircling half of the total light of the galaxy.

We can do this since, as it will be clear later, a de Vaucouleurs model has a finite luminosity, and since we are considering circular (circularized) galaxies only.

Remember that, when dealing with real galaxies with elongated or irregular isophotes, the effective radius of the circular model just introduced would be written as R^*_e  to remind us that it is not only effective but also equivalent.

G. de Vaucouleurs, Annales d’Astrophysique, 11, 247, 1948.

G. de Vaucouleurs, Annales d'Astrophysique, 11, 247, 1948.


The de Vaucouleurs (R1/4) law

By definition: L(R_e)=\frac{1}{2}L_T=2\pi I_0\int_0^{Re} 10^{-C\left(R/R_e\right)^{1/4}}RdR= \pi I_0\int_0^\infty 10^{-C\left(R/R_e\right)^{1/4}}RdR.

Placing:

\frac{R}{R_e} C^4 =  t ,

we obtain:

2\int_0^{C^4}\mbox{dex}\left(-t^{1/4}\right)tdt =\int_0^\infty\mbox{dex}\left(-t^{1/4}\right)tdt ,

from where:

I_e=I(R_e)=I_0 10^{-3.3307}\simeq I_0/2141.

I_e is the effective surface brightness, ~3.33 times fainter than the peak brightness.

The circular differential element in the integral over the sky of the surface brightness profile.

The circular differential element in the integral over the sky of the surface brightness profile.


The photometry of the E galaxy NGC 3379

Left: the R1/4 profile of NGC 3379. The (O-C) residuals (right-top) show the presence of a nuclear component in excess of the R1/4 law.

Left: the R1/4 profile of NGC 3379. The (O-C) residuals (right-top) show the presence of a nuclear component in excess of the R1/4 law.


More about the de Vaucouleurs (R1/4) law

In terms of Re, the de Vaucouleurs formula writes: I(R)=I_e\mbox{dex}\left\{-3.33\left[(R/R_e)^{1/4}-1\right]\right\}=I_e\mbox{exp}\left\{-7.67\left[(R/R_e)^{1/4}-1\right]\right\}. The (formal) total luminosity (again we extrapolate R to infinity) converges. It is:

L_T=2\pi I_e\int_0^\infty\exp\left\{-7.67\left[(R/R_e)^{1/4}-1\right]\right\}RdR=\frac{8!10^{7.67}}{(7.67)^8}\left(\pi R_e^2I_e\right)=7.22 \pi R_e^2 I_e=22.68 R_e^2 I_e.

From:  L_T=7.22\pi R_e^2 I_e=2L(R_e),  we calculate the mean surface intensity within the effective radius:

\langle I\rangle_e=\frac{L(R_e)}{\pi R_e^2}=\frac{L_T}{2\pi R_e^2}=3.61I_e. [Translate this result in units of mag/arcsec2.]

The relation between effective and peak intensities is: I_0=10^{3.33}I_e\simeq2000I_e, which, in magnitudes, reads:

-2.5\log\left[I(R)\right]=\mu(R)=\mu_e+8.33\left[(R/R_e)^{1/4}-1\right]. In conclusion, the magnitude difference between peak and effective intensities is constant: \mu(0)=\mu_e-8.33.

More about the de Vaucouleurs (R1/4) law

Assume that you have obtained the light profile of a (circular) galaxy by sampling the surface brightness at a set of radial distances from the center of the object. How do you verify whether the profile follows a de Vaucouleurs law and, in any case, how do you determine the values of the scale parameters? The answer to the first question is simple. You check if the surface brightness data versus R^{1/4} (no matter if not zero-point calibrated yet) define a straight line. You then extrapolate the best-fitting linear profile to R^{1/4}=0 [how do you do the best fit?], so to find \mu_0 and \mu_e = \mu_0+8.33. The abscissa of \mu_e is (R_e)^{1/4} .

[As you see, you have measured the fourth root of the quantity that you want. Does this affect the accuracy of your final result? Think about all sources of errors in the above procedure.]

Gauging the scale parameters

The photometric profile of the normal E NGC 3379, plotted in the de Vaucouleurs plane, is well fitted by the straight line. Its extrapolation to zero gives the starting point to derive the scale parameters.

The photometric profile of the normal E NGC 3379, plotted in the de Vaucouleurs plane, is well fitted by the straight line. Its extrapolation to zero gives the starting point to derive the scale parameters.


Sersic formula

In 1968, while preparing his Atlas de Galaxias Australes (Cordoba Obs.), José Luis Sersic (1933-1993) realized that the de Vaucouleurs R^{1/4} law could be profitably generalized by letting the exponent  1/4  be a free parameter  1/n:

\frac{I(R)}{I_0}=\mbox{\rm exp}\left(A\times R^{1/n}\right).

The idea came to him from the fact that with just one parametric formula he was able to represent the trends of the light profiles of ellipticals (n=4) and spiral disks (n=1), as we shall see soon. So, Sersic speculated that the parameter n, now called Sersic parameter after his name, could typically assume any value between 1 and 4.

According to Occam’s principle: “entia non sunt moltiplicanda praeter necessitatem“; that is, never add a parameter without a very good reason [explain the validity of this statement by thinking at polynomial fittings of observational data]. At Sersic’s time there were no reasons to accept his formula. The reason was found 25 years later by Caon et al. (see next two pages), who discovered a correlation between the size, or the luminosity, of a galaxy (early types and spiral bulges) and the value of the Sersic parameter given by the best fit of its luminosity profile with the Sersic formula.

The trend of the Sersic formula for some values of the Sersic parameter n.

The trend of the Sersic formula for some values of the Sersic parameter n.

Same as above, for a logarithmic abscissa.

Same as above, for a logarithmic abscissa.


The Sersic parmeter

Discovery paper of the correlation between Sersic parameter and the size/luminosity of galaxies. Credit: MNRAS.

Discovery paper of the correlation between Sersic parameter and the size/luminosity of galaxies. Credit: MNRAS.


Correlation btween scale parameters

Continuation from the previous page. Credit: MNRAS.

Continuation from the previous page. Credit: MNRAS.


The King law

In 1968 (A.J., 71, 276), inspired by the results of his studies of quasi-isothermal stellar systems, Ivan King wrote the following empirical formula for the light profiles of early-type galaxies:

\frac{I(R)}{k}=\left\{\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+\left(R/R_c \right)^2}}-\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+\left(R_t/R_c \right)^2}}\right\}^2.

R_c, named core radius, is a scale factor, while the so-called tidal radius R_t is a free parameter; the smaller it is, the steeper is the surface brightness decay in the outer envelope. Note that, but for R_t=\infty , the profiles are truncated. Note also that, for very large tidal radii, the inner profile mimics the behavior of seeing convolution [see lecture no. 23 about seeing]: the inner profile is in excess of the inward extrapolation of the outer trend.

The King law for the light profiles of spheroidal galaxies.

The King law for the light profiles of spheroidal galaxies.


Light profile deprojection

Let us now derive the space density of light, j(r), from the project light profile, I(R), in the case of a spherically symmetric, transparent galaxy.

From the geometrical relation: s^2=r^2-R^2 , one gets:

ds=\frac{rdr}{\sqrt{\left(r^2-R^2\right)}} .

The integral of the light density along the line of sight is:

I(R)=\int_{-\infty}^{+\infty}j(r)ds=2\int_{R=r}^{+\infty}\frac{j(r)rdr}{\sqrt{r^2-R^2}}

assuming simmetry of j(r).

 

Geometry of the integration along the line of sight, under spherical symmetry assumption.

Geometry of the integration along the line of sight, under spherical symmetry assumption.


Light profile deprojection

Being an integral equation with Abelian kernel, it can be inverted:

j(r)=-\frac{1}{\pi} \int_{r}^{+\infty}\left(\frac{dI(R^\prime)}{dR^\prime}\right)_{R^\prime=R}\frac{dR}{\sqrt{R^2-r^2}}.

Applying this result to Reynolds-Hubble’s profile:

\frac{I(R)}{I(R_0)}= \frac{4}{\left(1+R/R_0\right)^2}

we get:

j(r)= \frac{j_0}{\left[1+\left(r/R_0\right)^2\right]^{3/2}}.

Asymptotically, i.e. for R \gg R_0, it is: I \propto R^{-2} and j \propto r^{-3} . As a general rule, if at large radii the light density decreases as a power law with exponent n, also the surface brightness profile does, with an exponent n' = n - 1.


General formula for the light density

In dynamical modeling it is much more convenient to use the space density profile rather than the projected light distribution. For this purpose quite a few formulae have been proposed.
Some of them are generated by the following general formula:

j(r) = \frac{3-\alpha}{4\pi}\frac{aL}{r^\alpha\left(r+a\right)^{4-\alpha}},

where L is the total luminosity and a is a characteristic length.

By varying the parameter \alpha we obtain the different formulae:

  • \alpha =1  gives the Hernquist (1990) formula;
  • \alpha = 3/2  gives a trend very similar to the deprojection of a de Vaucouleurs surface brightness profile;
  • \alpha = 2  gives the Jaffe (1983) formula.
The Hernquit formula (black) and the Jaffe formula (gray). Density is in units of L/a3, radius is in unit of the scale a.

The Hernquit formula (black) and the Jaffe formula (gray). Density is in units of L/a3, radius is in unit of the scale a.


The Nuker formula

While reducing high resolution HST images, Tod Lauer et al. (A.J., 110, 2622, 1995) speculated on whether the excess light noted above King’s flat cores, there where light profiles have a break, had to be considered as independent subsystems. Thus they developed the so called “nuker” formula which fits well the profiles over a wide range including the center, keeping the notion of the break as physical feature characterized by its radius R_b and the corresponding surface brightness I_b:

I(R)=2^{(\beta-\gamma)/\alpha}I_b\left(\frac{R_b}{R}\right)^\gamma\left[1+\left(\frac{R}{R_b}\right)^\alpha\right]^{(\gamma-\beta)/\alpha}.

For  R\gg R_b,\,\, I(R)\rightarrow R^{-\beta}, matching the outer power law;
for  R\ll R_b,\,\, I(R)\rightarrow R^{-\gamma}, describing the cusp;
\alpha controls the smoothness of the transition between the cuspy core and the outer profile.

The Nuker formula fails convergence into a finite total luminosity for  \beta < 2.

Various trends of the Nuker formula for various values of the free parameter ?.

Various trends of the Nuker formula for various values of the free parameter ?.


The centers of ellipticals

The Nuker formula gives excellent fits; the price to pay is the introduction of 3 free parameters (but remember Hoccam’s rasor: entia non sunt moltiplicanda praeter necessitate, and the need in this case must be physical). It accounts for the various classes of cores recently discussed by Kormendy et al. (2009) for a complete sample of Virgo Cluster galaxies:

  • cores tend to flatten up towards the center in more luminous Es  (M_V< - 21.7\ mag).
    They are explained by “dry mergers” (no gas), where the accreted gas is rubbed out by a binary BH;
  • they rise steeply toward the center in midsize Es (-21.5 < M_V< 15.5 ~mag). The excess light may come from nuclear starburst resulting from “wet mergers” (that is with gas).
Nuker formula fits to two different light profiles: the core galaxy NGC 1399 and the power law galaxy NGC 596.

Nuker formula fits to two different light profiles: the core galaxy NGC 1399 and the power law galaxy NGC 596.


The cores of ETs at high resolution: correlations

Correlation of the Nuker formula parameters and of the central velocity dispersion with the total magnitude of ETs and bulges of S0-Sb. HST data (Faber et al., Ap.J., 114, 1771, 1999).

Correlation of the Nuker formula parameters and of the central velocity dispersion with the total magnitude of ETs and bulges of S0-Sb. HST data (Faber et al., Ap.J., 114, 1771, 1999).


The Petrosian radius

The Petrosian radius (Ap.J., 209, L1, 1976) is defined through the ratio \Re_P of the mean luminosity within the ring of radii R_0 and R> R_0, and the mean luminosity within the aperture of radius R:

\Re_P(R;R_0)=\left( \frac{\int_{R_0}^R 2\pi rI(r)dr}{\pi R^2-\pi R_0^2} \right)/\left(\frac{\int_{0}^R 2\pi rI(r)dr}{\pi R^2}\right).

If we assign a value to the ratio R_0/R and to a constant k, the Petrosian radius is the value of R at which \Re_P= k. For instance, for the SDSS: R_0/R = 0.85/1.25, and k = 0.2. Why the Petrosian radius is so popular in modern galaxy surveys? The reason is that  \Re_P(R;R_0) does not depend on the photometric scale parameter I(0) of the light profile: \Re_P(R;R_0) =\left( \frac{ \int_{R_0}^R 2\pi R^\prime I(R^\prime)dR^\prime}{\pi R^2-\pi R_0^2}\right)/\left(\frac{\int_{0}^R 2\pi R^\prime I(R^\prime)dR^\prime}{\pi R^2}\right) \=\left( \frac{I_0\int_{R_0}^R 2\pi R^\prime f(R^\prime)dR^\prime}{\pi R^2-\pi R_0^2}\right)/\left(\frac{I_0\int_{0}^R 2\pi R^\prime f(R^\prime)dR^\prime}{\pi R^2}\right), i.e. it is the same for two galaxies differing only for the mean surface brightness, while it depends on the shape f(R) of the light profile. Note that \Re_P \rightarrow 1 for R \rightarrow 0, \Re_P \rightarrow 0 for R \rightarrow \infty.


Colors and color gradients

On average early-type galaxies are red: the rest-frame (B-V) color ranges from 0.8 to 0.9. The color is due to a population of aged stars (young stars have already completed their cycle). The color gradients are negative, more and more as the mean color reddens (a trend which is weaker in dense environments, e.g. rich clusters). In true ellipticals the gradient slowly flattens up with increasing total luminosity. Why it is so, it is still matter of debate since several concurring causes are in play: plain stellar evolution, metallicity gradients, merging (but when?) and (consequent) AGN activity. Bulges are bluer than E galaxies (even at the same luminosity), indicating that they are younger and or more metal poor than ellipticals. Most bulges do not reach solar metallicity. Bulges also show negative color gradients (bluer outwards). Rest-frame colors of ellipticals change with redshift (distance) intrinsically (evolution). This property, as well as the new classification of galaxies based on SDSS and GALEX data, which is driven by the color versus luminosity (mass) diagram (the red and blue sequences) will be examined later.

Colors vs. Hubble types from Roberts and Haynes (Ann.Rev.A.A., 32, 115, 1994). Red lines mark the range of early-types (E-S0a).

Colors vs. Hubble types from Roberts and Haynes (Ann.Rev.A.A., 32, 115, 1994). Red lines mark the range of early-types (E-S0a).


I materiali di supporto della lezione

M. Capaccioli, "The de Vaucouleurs and the r1/4 law", 1989, article in The de Vaucouleurs: a Life for Astronomy, M. Capaccioli and H.G. Corwin Jr. (eds.), Adv. Series in Astrophysics and Cosmology, Vol. 4, World Scient. Press: Singapore, p. 173.

M. Capaccioli and G. de Vaucouleurs and , "Luminosity distribution in galaxies. II. A study of accidental and systematic errors with applications to NGC 3389", 1983, Ap.J.Supp., 52, 465 (with G.de Vaucouleurs).

M. Capaccioli, "Photometric properties of galaxies", 1989, Second Extragalactic Astronomy Regional Meeting (Cordoba, Argentina), Academia de Ciencias: Cordoba, 317.

G. de Vaucouleurs and M. Capaccioli, "Luminosity distribution in galaxies. I. The elliptical galaxy NGC 3379 as a luminosity distribution standard", 1979, Ap.J.Supp., 40, 699 (with G.de Vaucouleurs).

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