The Atlas3D project - XIX. The hot-gas content of early-type galaxies: fast versus slow rotators
Marc Sarzi, Katherine Alatalo, Leo Blitz, Maxime Bois, Frederic, Bournaud, M. Bureau, Michele Cappellari, Alison F. Crocker, Roger L. Davies,, Timothy A. Davis, P. T. de Zeeuw, Pierre-Alain Duc, Sadegh Khochfar, Davor, Krajnovic, Harald Kuntschner, Richard M. McDermid

TL;DR
This study investigates how the dynamical structure of early-type galaxies influences their hot gas content, revealing that fast rotators tend to have less hot gas than slow rotators, affecting their star formation potential.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy rotation type correlates with hot-gas content, highlighting the role of galaxy shape and dynamics in hot gas retention and star formation processes.
Findings
Slow rotators have hot gas luminosity and temperature consistent with stellar kinetic energy heating.
Fast rotators show lower hot gas luminosity than predicted by kinetic energy models.
Flatter galaxies tend to be more deficient in hot gas, affecting their ability to recycle stellar material.
Abstract
For early-type galaxies, the ability to sustain a corona of hot, X-ray emitting gas could have played a key role in quenching their star-formation history. Yet, it is still unclear what drives the precise amount of hot gas around these galaxies. By combining photometric and spectroscopic measurements for the early-type galaxies observed during the Atlas3D integral-field survey with measurements of their X-ray luminosity based on X-ray data of both low and high spatial resolution we conclude that the hot-gas content of early-type galaxies can depend on their dynamical structure. Specifically, whereas slow rotators generally have X-ray halos with luminosity L_X,gas and temperature T values that are in line with what is expected if the hot-gas emission is sustained by the thermalisaton of the kinetic energy carried by the stellar-mass loss material, fast rotators tend to display L_X,gas…
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