Photometric properties and luminosity function of nearby massive early-type galaxies
Y. Q. He, X. Y. Xia, C. N. Hao, Y. P. Jing, S. Mao, Cheng Li

TL;DR
This study provides detailed photometric measurements and luminosity functions for nearby massive early-type galaxies, revealing that previous surveys underestimated their brightness and size, thus impacting galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It offers improved photometric data and luminosity functions for massive early-type galaxies, addressing previous underestimations and implications for galaxy evolution theories.
Findings
Brightest galaxies are brighter by 0.16-0.26 mag than SDSS values.
Luminosity function declines more slowly at the bright end.
Measured stellar mass densities are higher than previous estimates.
Abstract
We perform photometric analyses for a bright early-type galaxy (ETG) sample with 2949 galaxies ( mag) in the redshift range of 0.05 to 0.15, drawn from the SDSS DR7 with morphological classification from Galaxy Zoo 1. We measure the Petrosian and isophotal magnitudes, as well as the corresponding half-light radius for each galaxy. We find that for brightest galaxies ( mag), our Petrosian magnitudes, and isophotal magnitudes to 25 and 1\% of the sky brightness are on average 0.16 mag, 0.20 mag, and 0.26 mag brighter than the SDSS Petrosian values, respectively. In the first case the underestimations are caused by overestimations in the sky background by the SDSS PHOTO algorithm, while the latter two are also due to deeper photometry. Similarly, the typical half-light radii () measured by the SDSS algorithm are smaller than our…
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