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Issue A&A
Volume 436, Number 1, June II 2005
Page(s) 57 - 65
Section Extragalactic astronomy
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20042464



A&A 436, 57-65 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042464

The elliptical galaxy NGC 720 : An unequal-mass galaxy merger remnant

S. B. Rembold1, M. G. Pastoriza1 and G. Bruzual2

1  Instituto de Fisica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Av. Bento Gonçalves 9500, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
    e-mail: rembold@if.ufrgs.br
2  Centro de Investigaciones de Astronomía, AP 264, Mérida 5101-A, Venezuela

(Received 1 December 2004 / Accepted 8 February 2005 )

Abstract
The stellar population of the central region of the galaxy NGC 720 has been investigated through longslit optical spectroscopy. The velocity dispersion and 13 Lick indices were obtained as a function of the radius along the semimajor axis of the galaxy. The Mg2 index presents a gradient of ${\rm d\,Mg}_2\,/\,{\rm d\,log}\,r=-0.079$ which behaves similarly to the $\ion{Fe}{i}$ lines, indicating no enhancement of Mg2 in relation to $\ion{Fe}{i}$. The stellar population ages and metallicities were derived by a population synthesis method using available evolutive spectrophotometric models. The synthesis indicates a strong age gradient along the semimajor axis of NGC 720 . In the central region a 13 Gyr and solar metallicity stellar population dominates the flux at 5870 Å; the contribution of this component vanishes at a radius of 0.73 kpc, where the total flux is accounted for by a younger, 5 Gyr and solar metallicity stellar population. For distances larger than 1 kpc a 2.5 Gyr component becomes very important. Moreover, NGC 720 is probably overabundant in CN in the center with respect to the solar abundance. The estimated total mass ( $3.29\times10^{11}~M_\odot$) and the Mg2 gradient values suggest that this galaxy might have undergone a merger event. The correspondence between the J-band brightness profile decomposition and the result of the spectral synthesis shows that this galaxy is formed by an old (13-5 Gyr), bulge-like, small-scale and massive spheroid and a younger (5-2.5 Gyr), large-scale disk component. We discuss our results in comparison with available numerical simulations and propose that the merger event must have occurred about 4 Gyr ago.


Key words: galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD -- galaxies: individual: NGC 720 -- galaxies: kinematics and dynamics -- galaxies: stellar content

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