Probing cool giants in unresolved galaxies using fluctuation eigenspectra: a demonstration using high-resolution MUSE observations of NGC 5128
Russell J. Smith (CEA, Durham)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel spectroscopic method leveraging Poisson sampling fluctuations to analyze unresolved stellar populations, demonstrated with high-resolution MUSE data of NGC 5128, revealing key spectral eigenspectra related to giant stars.
Contribution
The paper presents a new approach using fluctuation eigenspectra and principal components analysis to extract stellar population information from unresolved galaxies, a technique not previously demonstrated.
Findings
First eigenspectrum matches model predictions closely.
Second eigenspectrum remains below noise level in current data.
Method shows promise for probing giant stars in distant galaxies.
Abstract
I describe and demonstrate a new approach to using spectroscopic data to exploit Poisson sampling fluctuations in unresolved stellar populations. The method is introduced using spectra predicted for independent samples of stars from a 10 Gyr population a using a simple stochastic spectral synthesis model. A principal components analysis shows that >99 per cent of the spectral variation in the red-optical can be attributed to just three "fluctuation eigenspectra", which can be related to the number of giant stars present in each sample, and their distribution along the isochrone. The first eigenspectrum effectively encodes the spectrum of the coolest giant branch stars, and is equivalent to the ratio between high- and low-flux pixels discussed in previous literature. The second and third eigenspectra carry higher-order information from which the giant-star spectral sequence can in…
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