The SAMI Galaxy Survey: gravitational potential and surface density drive stellar populations -- I. early-type galaxies
Tania M. Barone (1, 2), Francesco D'Eugenio (1, 2), Matthew, Colless (1, 2), Nicholas Scott (2, 3), Jesse van de Sande (3), Joss, Bland-Hawthorn (2, 3), Sarah Brough (4), Julia J. Bryant (2, 3, 5),, Luca Cortese (6), Scott M. Croom (2, 3), Caroline Foster (3), Michael

TL;DR
This study finds that in early-type galaxies, gravitational potential and surface density are more strongly linked to stellar population properties than mass, offering new insights into galaxy evolution mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates that gravitational potential and surface density better predict stellar population characteristics than mass in early-type galaxies, refining understanding of galaxy evolution.
Findings
Color and metallicity correlate more strongly with gravitational potential than mass.
Stellar age correlates best with surface density.
Relations with potential and surface density show less scatter than with mass.
Abstract
The well-established correlations between the mass of a galaxy and the properties of its stars are considered evidence for mass driving the evolution of the stellar population. However, for early-type galaxies (ETGs), we find that color and stellar metallicity [Z/H] correlate more strongly with gravitational potential than with mass , whereas stellar population age correlates best with surface density . Specifically, for our sample of 625 ETGs with integral-field spectroscopy from the SAMI Galaxy Survey, compared to correlations with mass, the color--, [Z/H]--, and age-- relations show both smaller scatter and less residual trend with galaxy size. For the star formation duration proxy [/Fe], we find comparable results for trends with and , with both being significantly stronger than the [/Fe]- relation. In…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
