Galaxy populations in the Antlia cluster. I. Photometric properties of early-type galaxies
A. V. Smith Castelli, L. P. Bassino, T. Richtler, S. A. Cellone, C., Aruta, L. Infante

TL;DR
This study presents the first detailed colour-magnitude relation for early-type galaxies in the Antlia cluster, revealing a tight correlation that suggests internal processes dominate galaxy evolution over environmental effects.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive photometric analysis of early-type galaxies in Antlia using the Washington system, establishing a well-defined CMR and comparing it with other clusters.
Findings
Early-type galaxies follow a tight CMR with a slope of -13.6.
No clear luminosity-radius relation for early-type dwarfs, with a constant mean radius of ~1 kpc.
The CMR slope is similar across different clusters, implying internal processes are key in galaxy evolution.
Abstract
We present the first colour-magnitude relation (CMR) of early-type galaxies in the central region of the Antlia cluster, obtained from CCD wide-field photometry in the Washington photometric system. Integrated (C -T1) colours, T1 magnitudes, and effective radii have been measured for 93 galaxies (i.e. the largest galaxies sample in the Washington system till now) from the FS90 catalogue (Ferguson & Sandage 1990). Membership of 37 objects can be confirmed through new radial velocities and data collected from the literature. The resulting colour-magnitude diagram shows that early-type FS90 galaxies that are spectroscopically confirmed Antlia members or that were considered as definite members by FS90, follow a well defined CMR (sigma_(C -T1) ~ 0.07 mag) that spans 9 magnitudes in brightness with no apparent change of slope. This relation is very tight for the whole magnitude range but S0…
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