Galactic bulges from Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS observations: ages and dust

Citation
Rf. Peletier et al., Galactic bulges from Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS observations: ages and dust, M NOT R AST, 310(3), 1999, pp. 703-716
Citations number
69
Categorie Soggetti
Space Sciences
Journal title
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00358711 → ACNP
Volume
310
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
703 - 716
Database
ISI
SICI code
0035-8711(199912)310:3<703:GBFHST>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
We present optical and near-infrared colour maps of the central regions of bulges of S0 and spiral galaxies obtained with WFPC2 and NICMOS on the Hubb le Space Telescope (HST). By combined use of HST and ground-based data, the colour information spans a region from a few tens of pc to a few kpc. In a lmost all galaxies, the colour profiles in the central 100-200 pc become mo re rapidly redder. We attribute the high central colour indices to a centra l concentration of dust. We infer an average extinction at the centre of A( V)=0.6-1.0 mag. Several objects show central dust rings or discs at subkpc scales similar to those found by others in giant ellipticals. For galactic bulges of types S0 to Sb, the tightness of the B-I versus I-H relation sugg ests that the age spread among bulges of early-type galaxies is small, at m ost 2 Gyr. Colours at 1R(eff), where we expect extinction to be negligible, are similar to those of elliptical galaxies in the Coma cluster, suggestin g that these bulges formed at the same time as the bright galaxies in Coma. Furthermore, the galaxy ages are found to be independent of their environm ent. As it is likely that Coma was formed at redshift z > 3, our bulges, wh ich are in groups and in the field, must also have been formed at this epoc h. Bulges of early-type spirals cannot be formed by secular evolution of ba rs at recent epochs, because such bulges would be much younger. There are t hree galaxies of type Sbc and later; their bulges are younger and could per haps arise from secular evolution of transient bars. Our results are in goo d agreement with semi-analytic predictions, which also predict that bulges, in clusters and in the field, are as old as giant ellipticals in clusters.