The SAMI Galaxy Survey: stellar population and structural trends across the Fundamental Plane
Francesco D'Eugenio, Matthew Colless, Nicholas Scott, Arjen van der, Wel, Roger L. Davies, Jesse van de Sande, Sarah M. Sweet, Sree Oh, Brent, Groves, Rob Sharp, Matt S. Owers, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Scott M. Croom, Sarah, Brough, Julia J. Bryant, Michael Goodwin, Jon S. Lawrence

TL;DR
This study analyzes the Fundamental Plane of early-type galaxies using SAMI survey data, revealing that stellar population age significantly influences the scatter, but structural parameters do not fully explain the tilt of the FP.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the FP incorporating stellar population and structural observables, highlighting the dominant role of SSP age in FP scatter.
Findings
FP residuals strongly correlate with SSP age
Structural observables show little correlation with FP residuals
Most FP scatter is due to stellar population variations
Abstract
We study the Fundamental Plane (FP) for a volume- and luminosity-limited sample of 560 early-type galaxies from the SAMI survey. Using r-band sizes and luminosities from new Multi-Gaussian Expansion (MGE) photometric measurements, and treating luminosity as the dependent variable, the FP has coefficients a=1.2940.039, b= 0.9120.025, and zero-point c= 7.0670.078. We leverage the high signal-to-noise of SAMI integral field spectroscopy, to determine how structural and stellar-population observables affect the scatter about the FP. The FP residuals correlate most strongly (8 significance) with luminosity-weighted simple-stellar-population (SSP) age. In contrast, the structural observables surface mass density, rotation-to-dispersion ratio, S\'ersic index and projected shape all show little or no significant correlation. We connect the FP residuals to the empirical…
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