The accretion histories of brightest cluster galaxies from their stellar population gradients
Paola Oliva-Altamirano (1, 2), Sarah Brough (2), Jimmy (3), Kim-Vy, Tran (3), Warrick J. Couch (1, 2), Richard M. McDermid (2, 4), Chris, Lidman (2), Anja von der Linden (5,6, 7), Rob Sharp (8) ((1) Centre for, Astrophysics & Supercomputing

TL;DR
This study investigates the stellar population gradients of 9 local Brightest Cluster Galaxies, revealing diverse evolutionary histories with implications for galaxy formation and accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spatially-resolved stellar population analysis of BCGs, highlighting their varied ages and metallicity gradients and comparing them to similar-mass early-type galaxies.
Findings
Most BCGs show shallow metallicity gradients.
A majority have central ages around 7 Gyr, indicating active accretion.
Some BCGs are older than 11 Gyr, suggesting no recent star formation.
Abstract
We analyse the spatially-resolved stellar populations of 9 local () Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCGs) observed with VIMOS in IFU mode. Our sample is composed of 7 slow-rotating and 2 fast-rotating BCGs. We do not find a connection between stellar kinematics and stellar populations in this small sample. The BCGs have shallow metallicity gradients (median [Fe/H] ), high central metallicities (median Fe/H]), and a wide range of central ages (from 5 to 15 Gyr). We propose that the reason for this is diverse evolutionary paths in BCGs. 67 per cent of the sample (6/9) show Gyr old central ages, which reflects an active accretion history, and 33 per cent of the sample (3/9) have central ages older than 11 Gyr, which suggest no star formation since . The BCGs show similar central stellar populations and stellar…
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