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28 March 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0303359

 Article overview


Uncovering Additional Clues to Galaxy Evolution. II. The Environmental Impact of the Virgo Cluster on the Evolution of Dwarf Irregular Galaxies
Henry Lee ; Marshall L. McCall ; Michael G. Richer ;
Date 17 Mar 2003
Journal Astron.J. 125 (2003) 2975
Subject astro-ph
Affiliation1,2), Marshall L. McCall , and Michael G. Richer ( Max-Planck-Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany, York University, Toronto, Canada, Observatorio Astronomico Nacional, UNAM, Mexico
AbstractThe impact of the cluster environment on the evolution of dwarf galaxies is investigated by comparing the properties of a sample of dwarf irregulars (dIs) in the Virgo Cluster with a control sample of nearby ("field") dIs having oxygen abundances derived from [O III]4363 measurements and measured distances from resolved stellar constituents. Spectroscopic data are obtained for H II regions in 11 Virgo dIs distributed in the central and outer regions of the cluster. To ensure that oxygen abundances are derived in a homogeneous manner, oxygen abundances for field and Virgo dIs are computed using the bright-line method and compared with abundances directly obtained from [O III]4363, where available. They are found to agree to within about 0.2 dex with no systematic offset. At a given optical luminosity, there is no systematic difference in oxygen abundance between the sample of Virgo dIs and the sample of nearby dIs. However, five of the eleven Virgo dIs exhibit much lower baryonic gas fractions than field dIs at comparable oxygen abundances. Using field dIs as a reference, a gas-deficiency index for dIs is constructed, making it possible quantitatively to identify which galaxies have lost gas. For the Virgo sample, some of the dwarfs are gas-deficient by a factor of 30. The gas-deficiency correlates roughly with the X-ray surface brightness of the intracluster gas. Ram-pressure stripping can best explain the observed gas-poor dIs in the cluster sample. Together with the lack of significant fading and reddening of the gas-poor dIs compared to gas-normal dIs, these observations suggest that the gas-poor dIs in Virgo have recently encountered the intracluster medium for the first time. Faded remnants of gas-poor dIs in Virgo will resemble bright dwarf ellipticals presently seen in the cluster core.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0303359
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