Fundamental plane (elliptical galaxies)

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The fundamental plane for elliptical galaxies relates the effective radius, average surface brightness and central velocity dispersion.

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[edit] Motivation

Many characteristics of a galaxy are correlated. For example, as one would expect, a galaxy with a higher luminosity has a larger effective radius. The usefulness of these correlations is when a characteristic that can be determined without prior knowledge of the galaxy's distance (such as central velocity dispersion - the Doppler width of spectral lines in the central parts of the galaxy) can be correlated with a property, such as luminosity, that can be determined only for galaxies of a known distance. With this correlation, one can determine the distance to galaxies, a difficult task in astronomy.

[edit] Correlations

The following correlations have been empirically shown:

  • Larger galaxies have fainter effective surface brightnesses. Mathematically speaking: R_e \propto \langle I \rangle_e^{-0.83\pm0.08} (Djorgovski & Davis 1987) where Re is the effective radius, and \langle I \rangle_e is the mean surface brightness interior to Re.
  • As L_e = \pi \langle I \rangle_e R_e^2, we can substitute the previous correlation and see that 
L_e \propto \langle I \rangle_e \langle I \rangle_e^{-1.66}
and therefore: 
\langle I \rangle_e \sim L^{-3/2}
meaning that more luminous ellipticals have lower surface brightnesses.
  • More luminous elliptical galaxies have larger central velocity dispersions. This is called the Faber-Jackson relation (Faber & Jackson 1976). Analytically this is: L_e \sim \sigma_o^4. This is analogous to the Tully-Fisher relationship.
  • If central velocity dispersion is correlated to luminosity, and luminosity is correlated with effective radius, then it follows that the central velocity dispersion is positively correlated to the effective radius.

[edit] Usefulness

The usefulness of this three dimensional space  \left( \log R_e, \langle I \rangle_e, \log \sigma \right) is most practical when plotted as \log \, R_e against 0.26 \, (\langle I \rangle_e/\mu_B) + \log \sigma_o. The equation of the regression line through this plot is:


\log R_e = 0.36 \,(\langle I \rangle_e / \mu_B) + 1.4 \, \log \sigma_o

Thus by measuring observable quantities such as surface brightness and velocity dispersion (both independent of the observers distance to the source) can provide the effective radius (measured in kpc of the galaxy). As one now knows the linear size of the effective radius and can measure the angular size, it is easy to determine the distance of the galaxy from the observer through the small-angle approximation.

[edit] Variations

An early use of the fundamental plane is the Dn − σo correlation, given by:


\frac{D_n}{\text{kpc}} = 2.05 \, \left(\frac{\sigma}{100 \, \text{km}/\text{s}}\right)^{1.33}

determined by Dressler et al. (1987). Here Dn is the diameter within which the mean surface brightness is 20.75μB. This relationship has a scatter of 15% between galaxies. In 1991 Gudehus found that the Dn − σo correlation exhibits a systematic bias both in distance and absolute magnitude.

[edit] Notes

Diffuse dwarf ellipticals do not lie on the fundamental plane as shown by Kormendy (1987). Gudehus (1991) found that galaxies brighter than MV = − 23.04 lie on one plane, and those fainter than this value, M', lie on another plane. The two planes are inclined by about 11 degrees.

[edit] References

Binney J., Merrifield M., Galactic Astronomy, Princeton University Press, 1998.

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