Lenticular Galaxies and Their Environments
Sidney van den Bergh

TL;DR
This paper challenges the traditional view that ram-pressure stripping in clusters is the main formation mechanism for lenticular galaxies, suggesting alternative processes like gas starvation or ejection may be significant.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence questioning the dominance of ram-pressure stripping in S0 galaxy formation and proposes alternative evolutionary channels.
Findings
No significant difference in flattening distributions across environments.
Luminosity distributions of S0 galaxies are similar in different environments.
No clear environmental dependence observed in dust content of S0 galaxies.
Abstract
It is widely believed that lenticular (S0) galaxies were initially spirals from which the gas has been removed by interactions with hot cluster gas, or by ram-pressure stripping of cool gas from spirals that are orbiting within rich clusters of galaxies. However, problems with this interpretation are that: (1) Some lenticulars, such as NGC 3115, are isolated field galaxies rather than cluster members. (2) The distribution of flattening values of S0 galaxies in clusters, in groups and in the field are statistically indistinguishable. This is surprising because one might have expected most of the progenitors of field S0 galaxies to have been flattened late-type galaxies, whereas lenticulars in clusters are thought to have mostly been derived from bulge-dominated early-type galaxies. (3) It should be hardest for ram-pressure to strip massive luminous galaxies with deep potential wells.…
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