The MASSIVE Survey - V. Spatially-Resolved Stellar Angular Momentum, Velocity Dispersion, and Higher Moments of the 41 Most Massive Local Early-Type Galaxies
Melanie Veale, Chung-Pei Ma, Jens Thomas, Jenny E. Greene, Nicholas J., McConnell, Jonelle Walsh, Jennifer Ito, John P. Blakeslee, Ryan Janish

TL;DR
This study provides detailed spatially-resolved stellar kinematics for 41 of the most massive local early-type galaxies, revealing their angular momentum, velocity dispersion, and higher moments, and how these properties vary with galaxy mass and environment.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive 2D kinematic analysis of the most massive early-type galaxies, highlighting the prevalence of slow rotators and the relationship between kinematic features and galaxy properties.
Findings
High fraction (~80%) of slow and non-rotators among the sample.
The fraction of slow-rotators increases with galaxy mass, reaching ~90% at the brightest magnitudes.
Luminous galaxies tend to have rising or flat velocity dispersion profiles.
Abstract
We present spatially-resolved two-dimensional stellar kinematics for the 41 most massive early-type galaxies (MK <~ -25.7 mag, stellar mass M* >~ 10^11.8 Msun) of the volume-limited (D < 108 Mpc) MASSIVE survey. For each galaxy, we obtain high-quality spectra in the wavelength range of 3650 to 5850 A from the 246-fiber Mitchell integral-field spectrograph (IFS) at McDonald Observatory, covering a 107" x 107" field of view (often reaching 2 to 3 effective radii). We measure the 2-D spatial distribution of each galaxy's angular momentum (lambda and fast or slow rotator status), velocity dispersion (sigma), and higher-order non-Gaussian velocity features (Gauss-Hermite moments h3 to h6). Our sample contains a high fraction (~80% ) of slow and non-rotators with lambda <~ 0.2. When combined with the lower-mass ETGs in the ATLAS3D survey, we find the fraction of slow-rotators to increase…
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