A Search for the Most Massive Galaxies. II. Structure, Environment and Formation
M. Bernardi, J. B. Hyde, A. Fritz, R. K. Sheth, K. Gebhardt, R. C., Nichol

TL;DR
This study investigates the structure, environment, and formation of the most massive early-type galaxies, revealing two distinct types with different properties and origins, and correcting previous velocity dispersion measurements.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution imaging analysis that refines galaxy classifications, identifies two galaxy types with different formation histories, and offers insights into their structural and dynamical properties.
Findings
Less luminous galaxies are dense, flattened, and likely rotationally supported.
More luminous galaxies tend to be round, located in cluster centers, and resemble BCGs.
Corrected velocity dispersions show these galaxies are smaller and denser than previously thought.
Abstract
We study a sample of 43 early-type galaxies, selected from the SDSS because they appeared to have velocity dispersion > 350 km/s. High-resolution photometry in the SDSS i passband using HRC-ACS on board the HST shows that just less than half of the sample is made up of superpositions of two or three galaxies, so the reported velocity dispersion is incorrect. The other half of the sample is made up of single objects with genuinely large velocity dispersions. None of these objects has sigma larger than 426 +- 30 km/s. These objects define rather different relations than the bulk of the early-type galaxy population: for their luminosities, they are the smallest, most massive and densest galaxies in the Universe. Although the slopes of the scaling relations they define are rather different from those of the bulk of the population, they lie approximately parallel to those of the bulk "at…
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