Uncovering the Near-IR Dwarf Galaxy Population of the Coma Cluster with Spitzer IRAC
L.P. Jenkins (GSFC), A.E. Hornschemeier (GSFC), B. Mobasher (STScI),, D.M. Alexander (Univ. of Durham), F.E. Bauer (Columbia)

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer IRAC to survey the Coma cluster, revealing a large population of faint red dwarf galaxies in the near-infrared, which are underrepresented in optical surveys.
Contribution
First wide-field IR survey of the Coma cluster detecting a significant dwarf galaxy population with steep faint-end luminosity functions.
Findings
Detected ~29,200 sources at 3.6 micron.
Faint-end LF slopes are steeper than traditional models.
Infrared observations reveal dwarf galaxies missed by optical surveys.
Abstract
We present the first results of a Spitzer IRAC (Infrared Array Camera) wide-field survey of the Coma cluster. The observations cover two fields of different galaxy densities; the first is a 0.733 deg^2 region in the core of the cluster (Coma 1), the second a 0.555 deg^2 off-center region located ~57 arcmin (1.7 Mpc) south-west from the core (Coma 3). The observations, although short 70-90 s exposures, are very sensitive; we detect ~29,200 sources at 3.6 micron over the total ~1.3 deg^2 survey area. We construct 3.6 micron galaxy luminosity functions (LFs) for each field using selection functions based on spectroscopic redshifts. At the bright end, the LFs are well modeled by a traditional Schechter function; [M^star (3.6 micron), alpha_1] = [-25.17, -1.18] and [-24.69, -1.30] for Coma 1 and Coma 3 respectively. However, at the faint end (M(3.6 micron) > -20.5), there is a steep increase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
