The hybrid solution for the Fundamental Plane
M. D'Onofrio, G. Fasano, A. Moretti, P. Marziani, D. Bindoni, J., Fritz, J. Varela, D. Bettoni, A. Cava, B.M. Poggianti, M. Gullieuszik, P., Kjaergaard, M. Moles, B. Vulcani, A. Omizzolo, W.J. Couch, A. Dressler

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin and shape of the Fundamental Plane of early-type galaxies, proposing a hybrid model where structural non-homology and stellar populations jointly influence the FP tilt, supported by data from WINGS, ATLAS3D, and SDSS.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid explanation for the FP tilt emphasizing the combined roles of galaxy structure and stellar populations, validated across multiple datasets.
Findings
Structural non-homology is the main contributor to the FP tilt.
Stellar population effects are significant but less dominant.
Dark matter fraction and rotation influence the FP tilt.
Abstract
By exploiting the database of early-type galaxies (ETGs) members of the WINGS survey of nearby clusters, we address here the long debated question of the origin and shape of the Fundamental Plane (FP). Our data suggest that different physical mechanisms concur in shaping and tilting the FP with respect to the virial plane (VP) expectation. In particular, an hybrid solution in which the structure of galaxies and their stellar population are the main contributors to the FP tilt seems to be favoured. We find that the bulk of the tilt should be attributed to structural non-homology, while stellar population effects play an important but less crucial role. Our data indicate that the differential FP tilt between the V and K-band is due to a sort of entanglement between structural and stellar population effects, for which the inward steepening of color profiles (V-K) tends to increase at…
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