The Carnegie-Irvine Galaxy Survey. III. The Three-Component Structure of Nearby Elliptical Galaxies
Song Huang (1,2,3), Luis C. Ho (2), Chien Y. Peng (4), Zhao-Yu Li (5), and Aaron J. Barth (6) ((1) School of Astronomy, Space Science, Nanjing, University, (2) The Observatories of the Carnegie Institution for Science,, (3) Key Laboratory of Modern Astronomy, Astrophysics

TL;DR
This study reveals that most nearby elliptical galaxies are composed of three distinct photometric subcomponents, challenging the traditional single-Sersic model and providing insights into their formation history.
Contribution
The paper introduces a three-component photometric model for elliptical galaxies using 2D image decomposition, improving understanding of their structure and evolution.
Findings
Most ellipticals are not well described by a single Sersic profile.
Ellipticals typically contain three subcomponents with distinct sizes and luminosity fractions.
Subcomponents follow specific photometric and mass-size relations.
Abstract
Motivated by recent developments in our understanding of the formation and evolution of massive galaxies, we explore the detailed photometric structure of a representative sample of 94 bright, nearby elliptical galaxies, using high-quality optical images from the Carnegie-Irvine Galaxy Survey. The sample spans a range of environments and stellar masses, from M* = 10^{10.2} to 10^{12.0} solar mass. We exploit the unique capabilities of two-dimensional image decomposition to explore the possibility that local elliptical galaxies may contain photometrically distinct substructure that can shed light on their evolutionary history. Compared with the traditional one-dimensional approach, these two-dimensional models are capable of consistently recovering the surface brightness distribution and the systematic radial variation of geometric information at the same time. Contrary to conventional…
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