No Arabic abstract
We present an investigation about the shape of the initial mass function (IMF) of early-type galaxies (ETGs), based on a joint lensing and dynamical analysis, and on stellar population synthesis models, for a sample of 55 lens ETGs identified by the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) Survey. We construct axisymmetric dynamical models based on the Jeans equations which allow for orbital anisotropy and include a dark matter halo. The models reproduce in detail the observed textit{HST} photometry and are constrained by the total projected mass within the Einstein radius and the stellar velocity dispersion ($sigma$) within the SDSS fibers. Comparing the dynamically-derived stellar mass-to-light ratios $(M_*/L)_{rm dyn}$, obtained for an assumed halo slope $rho_{rm h}propto r^{-1}$, to the stellar population ones $(M_*/L)_{rm pop}$, derived from full-spectrum fitting and assuming a Salpeter IMF, we infer the mass normalization of the IMF. Our results confirm the previous analysis by the SLACS team that the mass normalization of the IMF of high $sigma$ galaxies is consistent on average with a Salpeter slope. Our study allows for a fully consistent study of the trend between IMF and $sigma$ for both the SLACS and ATLAS samples, which explore quite different $sigma$ ranges. The two samples are highly complementary, the first being essentially $sigma$ selected, and the latter volume-limited and nearly mass selected. We find that the two samples merge smoothly into a single trend of the form $logalpha =(0.38pm0.04)timeslog(sigma_{rm e}/200,mathrm{km~s}^{-1})+(-0.06pm0.01)$, where $alpha=(M_*/L)_{rm dyn}/(M_*/L)_{rm pop}$ and $sigma_{rm e}$ is the luminosity averaged $sigma$ within one effective radius $R_{rm e}$. This is consistent with a systematic variation of the IMF normalization from Kroupa to Salpeter in the interval $sigma_{rm e}approx90-270,mathrm{km~s}^{-1}$.
We use stellar masses, photometry, lensing, and velocity dispersions to investigate empirical correlations for the final sample of 73 early-type lens galaxies (ETGs) from the SLACS survey. The traditional correlations (Fundamental Plane [FP] and its projections) are consistent with those found for non-lens galaxies, supporting the thesis that SLACS lens galaxies are representative of massive ETGs. The addition of strong lensing estimates of the total mass allows us to gain further insights into their internal structure: i) the mean slope of the total mass density profile is <gamma> = 2.078+/-0.027 with an intrinsic scatter of 0.16+/-0.02; ii) gamma correlates with effective radius and central mass density, in the sense that denser galaxies have steeper profiles; iii) the dark matter fraction within reff/2 is a monotonically increasing function of galaxy mass and size; iv) the dimensional mass M_dim is proportional to the total mass, and both increase more rapidly than stellar mass M*; v) the Mass Plane (MP), obtained by replacing surface brightness with surface mass density in the FP, is found to be tighter and closer to the virial relation than the FP and the M*P, indicating that the scatter of those relations is dominated by stellar population effects; vi) we construct the Fundamental Hyper-Plane by adding stellar masses to the MP and find the M* coefficient to be consistent with zero and no residual intrinsic scatter. Our results demonstrate that the dynamical structure of ETGs is not scale invariant and that it is fully specified by the total mass, r_eff, and sigma. Although the basic trends can be explained qualitatively in terms of varying star formation efficiency as a function of halo mass and as the result of dry and wet mergers, reproducing quantitatively the observed correlations and their tightness may be a significant challenge for galaxy formation models.
We present the current photometric dataset for the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) Survey, including HST photometry from ACS, WFPC2, and NICMOS. These data have enabled the confirmation of an additional 15 grade `A (certain) lens systems, bringing the number of SLACS grade `A lenses to 85; including 13 grade `B (likely) systems, SLACS has identified nearly 100 lenses and lens candidates. Approximately 80% of the grade `A systems have elliptical morphologies while ~10% show spiral structure; the remaining lenses have lenticular morphologies. Spectroscopic redshifts for the lens and source are available for every system, making SLACS the largest homogeneous dataset of galaxy-scale lenses to date. We have developed a novel Bayesian stellar population analysis code to determine robust stellar masses with accurate error estimates. We apply this code to deep, high-resolution HST imaging and determine stellar masses with typical statistical errors of 0.1 dex; we find that these stellar masses are unbiased compared to estimates obtained using SDSS photometry, provided that informative priors are used. The stellar masses range from 10^10.5 to 10^11.8 M$_odot$ and the typical stellar mass fraction within the Einstein radius is 0.4, assuming a Chabrier IMF. The ensemble properties of the SLACS lens galaxies, e.g. stellar masses and projected ellipticities, appear to be indistinguishable from other SDSS galaxies with similar stellar velocity dispersions. This further supports that SLACS lenses are representative of the overall population of massive early-type galaxies with M* >~ 10^11 M$_odot$, and are therefore an ideal dataset to investigate the kpc-scale distribution of luminous and dark matter in galaxies out to z ~ 0.5.
In this paper we investigate whether the stellar initial mass function of early-type galaxies depends on their host environment. To this purpose, we have selected a sample of early-type galaxies from the SPIDER catalogue, characterized their environment through the group catalogue of Wang et al. and used their optical SDSS spectra to constrain the IMF slope, through the analysis of IMF-sensitive spectral indices. To reach a high enough signal-to-noise ratio, we have stacked spectra in velocity dispersion ($sigma_0$) bins, on top of separating the sample by galaxy hierarchy and host halo mass, as proxies for galaxy environment. In order to constrain the IMF, we have compared observed line strengths to predictions of MIUSCAT/EMILES synthetic stellar population models, with varying age, metallicity, and bimodal (low-mass tapered) IMF slope ($rm Gamma_b$). Consistent with previous studies, we find that $rm Gamma_b$ increases with $sigma_0$, becoming bottom-heavy (i.e. an excess of low-mass stars with respect to the Milky-Way-like IMF) at high $sigma_0$. We find that this result is robust against the set of isochrones used in the stellar population models, as well as the way the effect of elemental abundance ratios is taken into account. We thus conclude that it is possible to use currently state-of-the-art stellar population models and intermediate resolution spectra to consistently probe IMF variations. For the first time, we show that there is no dependence of $Gamma_b$ on environment or galaxy hierarchy, as measured within the $3$ SDSS fibre, thus leaving the IMF as an intrinsic galaxy property, possibly set already at high redshift.
The stellar initial mass function (IMF) seems to be variable and not universal, as argued in the literature in the last three decades. Several relations among the low-mass end of the IMF slope and other stellar population, photometric or kinematic parameters of massive early-type galaxies (ETGs) have been proposed, but a consolidated agreement on a factual cause of the observed variations has not been reached yet. We investigate the relations between the IMF and other stellar population parameters in NGC 3311, the central galaxy of the Hydra I cluster. NGC 3311 is characterized by old and metal-rich stars, like other massive ETGs, but has unusual increasing stellar velocity dispersion and [$alpha/$Fe] profiles. We use spatially resolved MUSE observations to obtain stellar population properties using Bayesian full-spectrum fitting in the central part of NGC 3311 to compare the IMF slope against other stellar parameters with the goal of assessing their relations/dependencies. For NGC 3311, we unambiguously invalidate the previously observed direct correlation between the IMF slope and the local stellar velocity dispersion, confirming some doubts already raised in the literature. This relation may arise as a spatial coincidence only, between the region with the largest stellar velocity dispersion, with that where the oldest, $textit{in situ}$ population is found and dominates. We also show robust evidence that the proposed IMF-metallicity relation is contaminated by the degeneracy between these two parameters. The tightest correlations we found are those between stellar age and IMF and between galactocentric radius and IMF. The variation of the IMF is not due to kinematical, dynamical, or global properties in NGC 3311. We speculate that IMF might be dwarf-dominated in the red-nuggets formed at high redshifts that ended up being the central cores of todays giant ellipticals. [Abridged]
We extend our initial study of the connection between the UV colour of galaxies and both the inferred stellar mass-to-light ratio, $Upsilon_*$, and a mass-to-light ratio referenced to Salpeter initial mass function (IMF) models of the same age and metallicity, $Upsilon_*/Upsilon_{Sal}$, using new UV magnitude measurements for a much larger sample of early-type galaxies, ETGs, with dynamically determined mass-to-light ratios. We confirm the principal empirical finding of our first study, a strong correlation between the GALEX FUV-NUV colour and $Upsilon_*$. We show that this finding is not the result of spectral distortions limited to a single passband (eg. metallicity-dependent line-blanketing in the NUV band), or of the analysis methodology used to measure $Upsilon_*$, or of the inclusion or exclusion of the correction for stellar population effects as accounted for using $Upsilon_*/Upsilon_{Sal}$. The sense of the correlation is that galaxies with larger $Upsilon_*$, or larger $Upsilon_*/Upsilon_{Sal}$, are bluer in the UV. We conjecture that differences in the low mass end of the stellar initial mass function, IMF, are related to the nature of the extreme horizontal branch stars generally responsible for the UV flux in ETGs. If so, then UV color can be used to identify ETGs with particular IMF properties and to estimate $Upsilon_*$. We also demonstrate that UV colour can be used to decrease the scatter about the Fundamental Plane and Manifold, and to select peculiar galaxies for follow-up with which to further explore the cause of variations in $Upsilon_*$ and UV colour.