A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The Stellar Populations of Two Ultra-diffuse Galaxies from Optical and Near-infrared Photometry




AuthorsViraj Pandya, Aaron J. Romanowsky, Seppo Laine, Jean P. Brodie, Benjamin D. Johnson, William Glaccum, Alexa Villaume, Jean-Charles Cuillandre, Stephen Gwyn, Jessica Krick, Ronald Lasker, Ignacio Martín-Navarro, David Martinez-Delgado, Pieter van Dokkum

PublisherIOP PUBLISHING LTD

Publication year2018

JournalAstrophysical Journal

Journal name in sourceASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL

Journal acronymASTROPHYS J

Article number29

Volume858

Issue1

Number of pages23

ISSN0004-637X

eISSN1538-4357

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aab498

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/31739838


Abstract
We present observational constraints on the stellar populations of two ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) using optical through near-infrared (NIR) spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting. Our analysis is enabled by new Spitzer-IRAC 3.6 and 4.5 mu m imaging, archival optical imaging, and the prospector fully Bayesian SED fitting framework. Our sample contains one field UDG (DGSAT I), one Virgo cluster UDG (VCC 1287), and one Virgo cluster dwarf elliptical for comparison (VCC 1122). We find that the optical-NIR colors of the three galaxies are significantly different from each other. We infer that VCC 1287 has an old (greater than or similar to 7.7 Gyr) and surprisingly metal-poor ([Z/Z(circle dot)] less than or similar to -1.0) stellar population, even after marginalizing over uncertainties on diffuse interstellar dust. In contrast, the field UDG DGSAT I shows evidence of being younger than the Virgo UDG, with an extended star formation history and an age posterior extending down to similar to 3 Gyr. The stellar metallicity of DGSAT I is sub-solar but higher than that of the Virgo UDG, with [Z/Z(circle dot)] = -0.63(-0.62)(+0.35); in the case of exactly zero diffuse interstellar dust, DGSAT I may even have solar metallicity. With VCC 1287 and several Coma UDGs, a general picture is emerging where cluster UDGs may be "failed" galaxies, but the field UDG DGSAT I seems more consistent with a stellar feedback-induced expansion scenario. In the future, our approach can be applied to a large and diverse sample of UDGs down to faint surface brightness limits, with the goal of constraining their stellar ages, stellar metallicities, and circumstellar and diffuse interstellar dust content.

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