Influence of cooled interstellar gas on the fundamental plane of elliptical galaxies

Citation
Wg. Mathews et F. Brighenti, Influence of cooled interstellar gas on the fundamental plane of elliptical galaxies, ASTROPHYS J, 545(1), 2000, pp. 181-189
Citations number
53
Categorie Soggetti
Space Sciences
Journal title
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
ISSN journal
0004637X → ACNP
Volume
545
Issue
1
Year of publication
2000
Part
1
Pages
181 - 189
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-637X(200012)545:1<181:IOCIGO>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
We explore the possible important influence of cooled interstellar gas on t he fundamental plane of elliptical galaxies. Interstellar cooling is descri bed by a parameterized sink term in the equation of continuity. Parameters that give the best fits to the X-ray observations of elliptical galaxy NGC 4472 are used as a template for other galaxies. These spatially dependent c ooling parameters are then extended homologously to elliptical galaxies of lower mass for which X-ray observations of the hot gas are currently unavai lable or impossible because of stronger relative X-ray emission from binary stars. Most of the interstellar gas cools within an effective radius where it can contribute an additional 10%-30% to the mass of the old stellar pop ulation. The absence of observed cooled gas and simple theoretical argument s support the hypothesis that the cooled gas is forming into low-mass stars , with implications that depend on the initial mass function (IMF) of this young stellar population. If the IMF includes only stars of very low mass, much less thanM. as is commonly believed, the cooled mass is optically dark . For this IMF, the mass-to-light ratios determined from stellar velocities systematically overestimate that of the old stellar population. Furthermor e, the total mass and spatial distribution of the optically dark stellar po pulation does not scale homologously with galactic luminosity or radius, so the total stellar mass-to-light ratio is expected to vary with galactic ra dius. These variations in stellar population and non-homology can introduce pronounced deviations from the fundamental plane. We investigate cooled ga s perturbations to the mass-to-light ratio for several idealized homologous elliptical galaxies and show that they can be incompatible with the observ ed thinness of the fundamental plane. However, if the IMF of the stellar po pulation produced from cooled interstellar gas is optically luminous, its i nfluence on observed stellar mass-to-light ratios and the fundamental plane would be lessened. If the IMF of a young, continuously forming, and optica lly luminous stellar population were sufficiently well behaved, it could ac count for about 10% of the optical light from large elliptical galaxies wit hin r(e), possibly having important implications for understanding the fund amental plane.