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A&A 502, 771-786 (2009)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200811532
The edge of the M 87 halo and the kinematics of the diffuse light in the Virgo cluster core
M. Doherty1, M. Arnaboldi2, 3, P. Das4, O. Gerhard4, J. A. L. Aguerri5, R. Ciardullo6, J. J. Feldmeier7, K. C. Freeman8, G. H. Jacoby9, and G. Murante31 European Southern Observatory, Santiago, Chile
e-mail: mdoherty@eso.org
2 European Southern Observatory, Garching, Germany
e-mail: marnabol@eso.org
3 INAF, Osservatorio Astronomico di Pino Torinese, Pino Torinese, Italy
e-mail: murante@oato.inaf.it
4 Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, Germany
e-mail: [pdas;gerhard]@mpe.mpg.de
5 Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Tenerife, Spain
e-mail: jalfonso@ll.iac.es
6 Dept. of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
e-mail: rbc@astro.psu.edu
7 Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH, USA
e-mail: jjfeldmeier@ysu.edu
8 Mount Stromlo Observatory, Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, ACT, Australia
e-mail: kcf@mso.anu.edu.au
9 WIYN Observatory, Tucson, AZ, USA
e-mail: jacoby@noao.org
Received 16 December 2008 / Accepted 22 April 2009
Abstract
Aims. We study the kinematics and dynamics of the extreme outer halo of
M 87, the central galaxy in the Virgo cluster, and its transition to
the intracluster light (ICL).
Methods. We present high resolution FLAMES/VLT spectroscopy of intracluster
planetary nebula (PN) candidates, targeting three new fields in the
Virgo cluster core with surface brightness down to
= 28.5.
Based on the projected phase space information (sky positions and
line-of-sight velocities) we separate galaxy and cluster components
in the confirmed PN sample. We then use the spherical Jeans
equation and the total gravitational potential as traced by the
X-ray emission to derive the orbital distribution in the outer
stellar halo of M 87. We determine the luminosity-specific PN number
for the M 87 halo and the ICL from the photometric PN catalogs and
sampled luminosities, and discuss the origin of the ICL in Virgo
based on its measured PN velocities.
Results. We confirm a further 12 PNs in Virgo, five of which are bound to the
halo of M 87, and the remainder are true intracluster planetary
nebulas (ICPNs). The M 87 PNs are confined to the extended stellar
envelope of M 87, within a projected radius of ~160 kpc, while
the ICPNs are scattered across the whole surveyed region between
M 87 and M 86, supporting a truncation of M 87's luminous outer halo
at a 2
level. The line-of-sight velocity distribution of
the M 87 PNs at projected radii of 60 kpc and 144 kpc shows
(i) no evidence for rotation of the halo along the photometric
major axis; and (ii) that the velocity dispersion decreases in
the outer halo, down to
= 78
25 km s-1 at
144 kpc. The Jeans model for the M 87 halo stars fits the observed
line-of-sight velocity dispersion profile only if the stellar
orbits are strongly radially anisotropic (
0.4 at
r
10 kpc increasing to 0.8 at the outer edge), and if
additionally the stellar halo is truncated at
150 kpc
average elliptical radius. The
-parameters for the M 87
halo and the ICL are in the range of values observed for old
(>10 Gyr) stellar populations.
Conclusions. Both the spatial segregation of the PNs at the systemic velocity of
M 87 and the dynamical model support that the stellar halo of M 87
ends at ~150 kpc. We discuss several possible explanations
for the origin of this truncation but are unable to discriminate
between them: tidal truncation following an earlier encounter of
M 87 with another mass concentration in the Virgo core, possibly
around M 84, early AGN feedback effects, and adiabatic contraction
due to the cluster dark matter collapsing onto M 87. From the
spatial and velocity distribution of the ICPNs we infer that M 87
and M 86 are falling towards each other and that we may be observing
them just before the first close pass. The new PN data support the
view that the core of the Virgo cluster is not yet virialized but
is in an ongoing state of assembly, and that massive elliptical
galaxies are important contributors to the ICL in the Virgo
cluster.
Key words: galaxies: clusters: individual: Virgo -- stellar dynamics -- ISM: planetary nebulae: general -- galaxies: halos -- galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD -- galaxies: formation
© ESO 2009
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