The ATLAS3D Project -- XXIII. Angular momentum and nuclear surface brightness profiles
Davor Krajnovic, A. M. Karick, Roger L. Davies, Thorsten Naab, Marc, Sarzi, Eric Emsellem, Michele Cappellari, Paolo Serra, P.T. de Zeeuw,, Nicholas Scott, Richard M. McDermid, Anne-Marie Weijmans, Timothy A. Davis,, Katherine Alatalo, Leo Blitz, Maxime Bois, Martin Bureau

TL;DR
This study explores the relationship between nuclear light profiles and galaxy kinematics in 135 ATLAS3D galaxies, revealing correlations between core presence, galaxy mass, and angular momentum, and identifying distinct populations of fast and slow rotators.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the connection between nuclear surface brightness profiles and galaxy kinematics, highlighting the existence of a population of fast rotators with cores and differences between core and core-less galaxies.
Findings
Cores are found only in massive, slow-rotating galaxies with high velocity dispersion.
Approximately 10% of nearby early-type galaxies contain cores.
Core fast rotators are morphologically and kinematically distinct from core slow rotators.
Abstract
[Abridged and Edited] We investigate nuclear light profiles in 135 ATLAS3D galaxies for which the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging is available and compare them to the large scale kinematics obtained with the SAURON integral-field spectrograph. Specific angular momentum, lambda_R, correlates with the shape of nuclear light profiles, where cores are typically found in slow rotators and core-less galaxies are fast rotators. Cores are found only in massive galaxies and only in systems with the stellar mass M>8x10^10 Msun. Based on our sample, we, however, see no evidence for a bimodal distribution of nuclear slopes. The best predictor for finding a core is based on the stellar velocity dispersion within an effective radius, sigma_e, and specific angular momentum, where cores are found for lambda_R<0.25 and sigma_e>160 km/s. We estimate that only about 10% of nearby early-type galaxies…
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