The Hydra I cluster core - II. Kinematic complexity in a rising velocity dispersion profile around the cD galaxy NGC 3311
M. Hilker, T. Richtler, C.E. Barbosa, M. Arnaboldi, L. Coccato, and C., Mendes de Oliveira

TL;DR
This study investigates the complex kinematic structure of NGC 3311's halo, revealing multiple stellar populations and challenging previous dark matter halo assumptions, with implications for galaxy infall processes.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed kinematic measurements of NGC 3311's halo, demonstrating the limitations of single-tracer models and questioning prior dark matter core claims.
Findings
Velocity dispersion rises with radius and shows azimuthal dependence.
Multiple stellar populations with different kinematic properties are present.
Simple Jeans models with multiple tracers explain the observed kinematics.
Abstract
NGC 3311, the central galaxy of the Hydra I cluster, shows signatures of recent infall of satellite galaxies from the cluster environment. Previous work has shown that the line-of-sight velocity dispersion of the stars and globular clusters in the extended halo of NGC 3311 rises up to the value of the cluster velocity dispersion. We performed multi-object spectroscopic observations of the diffuse stellar halo of NGC 3311 using VLT/FORS2 in MXU mode to mimic a coarse `IFU'. We use pPXF to extract the kinematic information. We find a homogeneous velocity and velocity dispersion field within r<10 kpc. Beyond this radius, both the velocities and dispersions start to depend on azimuth angle and show a significant intrinsic scatter. The inner spheroid of NGC 3311 can be described as a slow rotator. Outside 10 kpc the cumulative angular momentum is rising. If the radial dependence alone is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
