THE PECULIAR MOTIONS OF EARLY-TYPE GALAXIES IN TWO DISTANT REGIONS - V. THE MG-SIGMA RELATION, AGE AND METALLICITY
/ Authors
/ Abstract
We investigate the variation in the zero-point of the Mg‐j relation between clusters. We find that it is consistent with the number of galaxies observed per cluster and the intrinsic scatter between galaxies in the global Mg‐j relation. We find no significant correlation between the Mg‐j zero-point and the cluster velocity dispersion, X-ray luminosity or X-ray temperature over a wide range in cluster mass. These results provide constraints for models of the formation of elliptical galaxies. However, the Mg‐j relation on its own does not place strong limits on systematic errors in Fundamental Plane (FP) distance estimates resulting from stellar population differences between clusters. We compare the intrinsic scatter in the Mg‐j and Fundamental Plane relations with stellar population models in order to constrain the dispersion in ages, metallicities and M=L ratios for early-type galaxies at fixed velocity dispersion. We find that variations in age or metallicity alone cannot explain the measured intrinsic scatter in both Mg‐j and the FP. We derive the joint constraints on the dispersion in age and metallicity implied by the scatter in the Mg‐j and FP relations for a simple Gaussian model. We find upper limits on the dispersions in age and metallicity at fixed velocity dispersion of 32 per cent in dt=t and 38 per cent in dZ=Z if the variations in age and metallicity are uncorrelated; only strongly anticorrelated variations lead to significantly higher upper limits. The joint distribution of residuals from the Mg‐j and FP relations is only marginally consistent with a model having no correlation between age and metallicity, and is better matched by a model in which age and metallicity variations are moderately anticorrelated (dt=t < 40 per cent, dZ=Z < 50 per cent and r < ˇ0:5), with younger galaxies being more metal-rich.
Journal: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society