Issue |
A&A
Volume 456, Number 3, September IV 2006
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 839 - 846 | |
Section | Extragalactic astronomy | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20054394 | |
Published online | 06 September 2006 |
Physical properties of Hickson compact groups and of the loose groups within which they are embedded
1
Instituto Nacional de Astrofísica Optica y Electrónica, AP 51 y 216, CP 72000, Puebla, Pue., Mexico e-mail: [hrant,papaqui]@inaoep.mx
2
Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia
3
Institute of Astronomy & Astrophysics, National Observatory of Athens, Palaia Penteli, 152 36 Athens, Greece e-mail: mplionis@astro.noa.gr
Received:
21
October
2005
Accepted:
4
May
2006
Using new data and an enlarged group sample we verify some of our
previously
published results and present a number of new facts that suggest that
compact groups could be casual concentrations in prolate-like looser
groups, and thus the
nature of compact and ordinary poor groups is probably the same.
To this end we used the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) redshift catalogue to
look for galaxies with accordant redshifts in the nearby environment
(up to ~2 Mpc) of 15 Hickson compact groups (HCG).
We also used known member redshifts of
looser groups in the environment of 7 other HCGs.
From this sample of 22 HCGs we find that: (a) HCG's tend to be
aligned with the overall galaxy distribution in their ~1 Mpc
environment; (b) the well-established
orientation effect by which the group velocity dispersion
correlates with group
axial ratio q is present and particularly strong also in the HCG + environment
systems; (c) the velocity dispersion
of the HCG + environment
systems as well as of ordinary poor groups, depends only weakly on the
group richness, i.e. on the mass; (d) the mean absolute K-band magnitude
of E/S0 galaxies in HCGs is similar to the
corresponding one in ordinary poor groups and is brighter than that
of isolated E/S0's, indicating that they were formed by the merging of
two galaxies of similar luminosity; (e) the fraction of E/S0 galaxies
in these HCGs depends, albeit weakly, on the group's richness and
on
; (f) the fraction of AGNs is similar in
the HCGs and their close environment, while the
fraction of starburst galaxies is significantly higher in the HCGs;
(g) the fraction of active galaxies (AGNs
and starbursts) is anti-correlated with the velocity dispersion of the
HCG + environment systems.
The combination of all the above facts constitutes a picture in which
compact groups are condensations within looser prolate-like, elongated
systems, and they appear to be compact when their member galaxies, moving in
radial orbits along the group elongation, happen to come close to each
other (in which case dynamical interactions among these galaxies
become even more probable)
or when the group is oriented close to the line of sight, so that many
of its members are projected over a small solid angle.
The probability of either case is small, so the number of
CGs should be much smaller than that of ordinary groups, as observed.
Furthermore, the observed fractions of early-type and active galaxies,
as well as their correlations with the group velocity dispersion suggests
a picture by which nuclear activity and galaxy transformation by
merging is instigated by effective gravitational interactions in the
low-velocity dispersion groups, which then dynamically evolve
via virialization processes to higher velocity dispersion groups,
which thus have a higher fraction of early-type galaxies.
Key words: galaxies: general / galaxies: clusters: general / cosmology: large-scale structure of Universe
© ESO, 2006
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