The Kormendy Relation of Galaxies in the Frontier Fields Clusters: Abell S1063 and MACS J1149.5+2223
Luca Tortorelli, Amata Mercurio, Maurizio Paolillo, Piero Rosati,, Adriana Gargiulo, Raphael Gobat, Italo Balestra, G.B. Caminha, Marianna, Annunziatella, Claudio Grillo, Marco Lombardi, Mario Nonino, Alessandro, Rettura, Barbara Sartoris, Veronica Strazzullo

TL;DR
This study investigates how the Kormendy relation parameters vary with different galaxy sample selections in two galaxy clusters, using deep HST and VLT data to understand implications for galaxy evolution studies.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of the Kormendy relation dependence on galaxy classification methods and provides a robust dataset of galaxy structural parameters.
Findings
KR slope is consistent across early-type, elliptical, and passive galaxy samples.
Sample selection influences the estimated KR parameters.
Red galaxy sample shows marginally different KR slope.
Abstract
We analyse the Kormendy relations (KRs) of the two Frontier Fields clusters, Abell S1063, at z = 0.348, and MACS J1149.5+2223, at z = 0.542, exploiting very deep Hubble Space Telescope photometry and VLT/MUSE integral field spectroscopy. With this novel dataset, we are able to investigate how the KR parameters depend on the cluster galaxy sample selection and how this affects studies of galaxy evolution based on the KR. We define and compare four different galaxy samples according to: (a) S\'ersic indices: early-type ('ETG'), (b) visual inspection: 'ellipticals', (c) colours: 'red', (d) spectral properties: 'passive'. The classification is performed for a complete sample of galaxies with m 22.5 ABmag (M M). To derive robust galaxy structural parameters, we use two methods: (1) an iterative estimate of structural parameters using…
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.
