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A&A 436, 443-455 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042280
The AMIGA project
I. Optical characterization of the CIG catalog
L. Verdes-Montenegro1, J. Sulentic2, U. Lisenfeld1, 3, S. Leon1, D. Espada1, E. Garcia1, J. Sabater1 and S. Verley1, 41 Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, CSIC, Apdo. 3004, 18080 Granada, Spain
e-mail: lourdes@iaa.es
2 Department of Astronomy, Univ. of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, USA
3 Dept. Física Teórica y del Cosmos, Universidad de Granada, Spain
4 LERMA - Observatoire de Paris, 61 Av. de l'Observatoire, 75014 Paris, France
(Received 29 October 2004 / Accepted 16 February 2005 )
Abstract
The AMIGA project (Analysis of the Interstellar Medium of
Isolated Galaxies) is compiling a multiwavelength database of isolated
galaxies that includes optical (B and H
), infrared (FIR and
NIR) and radio (continuum plus HI and CO lines) properties. It involves a
refinement of the pioneering Catalog of Isolated Galaxies.
This paper is the first in a series and begins
with analysis of the global properties of the nearly redshift-complete
CIG with emphasis on the Optical Luminosity Function (OLF) which we
compare with other recent estimates of the OLF for a variety of
environments. The CIG redshift distribution for n= 956 galaxies
re-enforces the evidence for a bimodal structure seen earlier in smaller
samples. The peaks at redshift near 1500 and 6000 km s-1, corresponding
respectively to galaxies in the local supercluster and those in more
distant large-scale components (particularly Perseus-Pisces). The two
peaks in the redshift distribution are superimposed on 50% or more of
the sample that is distributed in a much more homogeneous way. The CIG
probably represents the most homogeneous local field example that has
ever been compiled. Our derivation of the CIG OLF is consistent with
other studies of the OLF for lower density environments. This
comparison via the Schechter parameter formalization shows that: 1) M* increases with galaxy surface density on the sky and 2)
shows a weaker tendency to do the same. The CIG represents the largest and most complete foundation for studies of isolated galaxies and is likely
as close as we can come to a field sample.
Key words: galaxies: evolution -- galaxies: interactions -- galaxies: luminosity function, mass function -- surveys
SIMBAD Objects
Tables at the CDS
© ESO 2005
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