Eight luminous early-type galaxies in nearby pairs and sparse groups I. Stellar populations spatially analysed
D. A. Rosa, A. C. Milone, A. C. Krabbe, I. Rodrigues

TL;DR
This study conducts a detailed spatial analysis of stellar populations in eight luminous early-type galaxies from nearby sparse groups and pairs, examining how mass, environment, and interactions influence their formation and evolution.
Contribution
It provides new empirical data on stellar population gradients and their relation to galaxy properties, using spatially resolved spectroscopy and synthesis modeling.
Findings
Old stellar populations dominate regions up to one effective radius.
Metallicity gradients are generally negative, age and [$eta$/Fe] gradients are null.
No clear correlation between stellar populations and environment or LINER presence.
Abstract
We present a detailed spatial analysis of stellar populations based on long-slit optical spectra in a sample of eight luminous early-type galaxies selected from nearby sparse groups and pairs, three of them may be interacting with a galaxy of similar mass. We have measured luminosity-weighted averages of age, [M/H], [Fe/H], and [/Fe] to add empirical data relative to the influence of galaxy mass, environment, interaction, and AGN feedback in their formation and evolution. The stellar population of the individual galaxies were determined through the stellar population synthesis code STARLIGHT using semi-empirical simple stellar population models. Radial variations of luminosity-weighted means of age, [M/H], [Fe/H], and [/Fe] were measured up to half of the effective radius of each galaxy. We found trends between these values and the nuclear stellar velocity dispersion.…
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