Understanding the role of morphology and environment in the dynamical evolution of isolated galaxy triplets
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vásquez Bustos, P.; Argudo Fernández, María del Carmen; Grajales Medina, D.; Duarte Puertas, Salvador; Verley, SimonEditorial
EDP Sciences
Materia
Galaxies: general Galaxies: evolution Galaxies: formation Galaxies: interactions Galaxies: groups: general
Fecha
2023-02-06Referencia bibliográfica
P. Vásquez-Bustos. et al. Understanding the role of morphology and environment in the dynamical evolution of isolated galaxy triplets A&A 670, A63 (2023) []https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202245297
Patrocinador
DI-PUCV research project 039.481/2020; Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT) CONICYT FONDECYT 11200107; Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades EMERGIA20_38888; University of Granada; Junta de Andalucia P20_00334; FEDER/Junta de Andalucia-Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades A-FQM-510-UGR20; Spanish Government AYA2016-79724-C4-4-P PID2019-107408GB-C44; Junta de Andalucia P18-FR-2664; Spanish Government SEV-2017-0709; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation; National Science Foundation (NSF); United States Department of Energy (DOE); National Aeronautics & Space Administration (NASA) NAS5-98034Resumen
Context. The environments where galaxies reside affects their evolutionary histories. Galaxy triplets (systems composed of three
physically bound galaxies) are one of simplest groups of galaxies, and are therefore excellent laboratories to study evolutionary
mechanisms where effects of the environment are minimal.
Aims. We present a statistical study of the dynamical properties of isolated galaxy triplets as a function of their local and large-scale
environments. To explore the connection of the dynamical evolution on the systems with the evolution of the galaxies composing the
triplets, we consider observational properties such as morphology and star formation rate (SFR).
Methods. We used the SDSS-based catalogue of Isolated Triplets (SIT), which contains 315 triplets. We classified each triplet ac cording to galaxy morphologies and defined a parameter Qtrip to quantify the total local tidal strengths in the systems. To quantify the
dynamical stage of the system we used the parameters of harmonic radius RH, velocity dispersion σvr
, crossing time H0tc
, and virial
mass Mvir.
Results. Triplets composed of three early-type galaxies present the smallest RH, indicating that they are in general more compact than
triplets with one or more late-type galaxies. Among triplets with low values of RH and H0tc
, SIT triplets with Qtrip < −2 are relaxed
systems that are more dynamically evolved, while triplets with Qtrip > −2 show compact configurations due to interactions within the
system, such as ongoing mergers.
Conclusions. We found that there is no dominant galaxy in triplets in terms of properties of stellar populations such as global colour
and SFR. Moreover, the global SFR in isolated triplets composed of two or more early-type galaxies increases with the stellar mass
ratio of the galaxies with respect to the central galaxy, therefore the system is globally ‘rejuvenated’
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