A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Towards a new classification of galaxies: principal component analysis of CALIFA circular velocity curves




AuthorsV. Kalinova, D. Colombo, E. Rosolowsky, R. Kannan, L. Galbany, R. García-Benito, R. González Delgado, S. F. Sánchez, T. Ruiz-Lara, J. Méndez-Abreu, C. Catalán-Torrecilla, L. Sánchez-Menguiano, A. de Lorenzo-Caceres, L. Costantin, E. Florido, K. Kodaira, R. A. Marino, R. Läsker, J. Bland-Hawthorn

PublisherOxford University Press

Publishing placeOxford

Publication year2017

JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume469

Issue3

First page 2539

Last page2594

Number of pages56

ISSN0035-8711

eISSN1365-2966

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx901

Web address https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/469/3/2539/3605379/Towards-a-new-classification-of-galaxies-principal


Abstract

We present a galaxy classification system for 238 (E1–Sdm) CALIFA (Calar
Alto Legacy Integral Field Area) galaxies based on the shapes and
amplitudes of their circular velocity curves (CVCs). We infer the CVCs
from the de-projected surface brightness of the galaxies, after scaling
by a constant mass-to-light ratio based on stellar dynamics – solving
axisymmetric Jeans equations via fitting the second velocity moment

Vrms=V2+σ2−−−−−−−√

of the stellar kinematics. We use principal component analysis (PCA)
applied to the CVC shapes to find characteristic features and use a k-means
classifier to separate circular curves into classes. This objective
classification method identifies four different classes, which we name
slow-rising (SR), flat (FL), round-peaked (RP) and sharp-peaked (SP)
circular curves. SR are typical for low-mass, late-type (Sb–Sdm), young,
faint, metal-poor and disc-dominated galaxies. SP are typical for
high-mass, early-type (E1–E7), old, bright, metal-rich and
bulge-dominated galaxies. FL and RP appear presented by galaxies with
intermediate mass, age, luminosity, metallicity, bulge-to-disc ratio and
morphologies (E4–S0a, Sa–Sbc). The discrepancy mass factor, fd = 1 − M*/Mdyn,
have the largest value for SR and SP classes (∼ 74 per cent
and ∼ 71 per cent, respectively) in contrast to the FL and RP classes
(with ∼ 59 per cent and ∼ 61 per cent, respectively). Circular curve
classification presents an alternative to typical morphological
classification and appears more tightly linked to galaxy evolution.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 11:50