Halpha imaging observations of early-type galaxies from the ATLAS3D survey
G. Gavazzi, G. Consolandi, S. Pedraglio, M. Fossati, M. Fumagalli and, A. Boselli

TL;DR
This study used Halpha imaging to analyze ionized hydrogen in 147 early-type galaxies from the ATLAS3D survey, revealing diverse star formation activity linked to galaxy mass and morphology.
Contribution
It provides a detailed assessment of Halpha emission in a representative sample of ETGs, linking ionized gas content to galaxy evolution and kinematic classification.
Findings
37% of ETGs detected in Halpha emission
Strong Halpha emission associated with low-mass S0 galaxies with star-forming disks
Most massive ETGs are gas-poor and passive
Abstract
The traditional knowledge of the mechanisms that caused the formation and evolution of early-type galaxies (ETG) in a hierarchical universe was challenged by the unexpected finding by ATLAS3D that 86% of the ETGs show signs of a fast-rotating disk. This implies a common origin of most spiral galaxies, followed by a quenching phase, while only a minority of the most massive systems are slow rotators and were likely to be the products of merger events. Our aim is to improve our knowledge on the content and distribution of ionized hydrogen and their usage to form stars in a representative sample of ETGs for which the kinematics and detailed morphological classification were known from ATLAS3D. Using narrow-band filters centered on the redshifted Halpha line along with a broad-band (r-Gunn) filter to recover the stellar continuum, we observed or collected existing imaging observations for…
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