The ACS Fornax Cluster Survey. II. The Central Brightness Profiles of Early-Type Galaxies: A Characteristic Radius on Nuclear Scales and the Transition from Central Luminosity Deficit to Excess
Patrick Cote, Laura Ferrarese, Andres Jordan, John P. Blakeslee,, Chin-Wei Chen, Leopoldo Infante, David Merritt, Simona Mei, Eric W. Peng,, John L. Tonry, Andrew A. West, Michael J. West

TL;DR
This study analyzes surface brightness profiles of early-type galaxies in Virgo and Fornax, revealing a characteristic radius where profiles transition from deficits to excesses, challenging previous claims of bimodality and suggesting a smooth variation with galaxy luminosity.
Contribution
Introduces a robust parameter to quantify central luminosity deficits or excesses, demonstrating a continuous variation across galaxy luminosities and refuting bimodal distribution claims.
Findings
Bright galaxies show central light deficits.
Fainter galaxies exhibit central light excesses.
No evidence for a bimodal distribution of core properties.
Abstract
We analyse HST surface brightness profiles for 143 early-type galaxies in the Virgo and Fornax Clusters. Sersic models provide accurate descriptions of the global profiles with a notable exception: the observed profiles deviate systematically inside a characteristic "break" radius of R_b ~ 0.02R_e where R_e is the effective radius of the galaxy. The sense of the deviation is such that bright galaxies (M_B < -20) typically show central light deficits with respect to the inward extrapolation of the Sersic model, while the great majority of low- and intermediate-luminosity galaxies (-19.5 < M_B < -15) show central light excesses; galaxies occupying a narrow range of intermediate luminosities (-20 < M_B < -19.5) are usually well fitted by Sersic models over all radii. The slopes of the central surface brightness profiles, when measured at fixed fractions of R_e, vary smoothly as a function…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
