Bibcode
Laurikainen, E.; Salo, H.; Buta, R.; Knapen, J. H.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 418, Issue 3, pp. 1452-1490.
Advertised on:
12
2011
Citations
143
Refereed citations
134
Description
We present an atlas of Ks-band images of 206 early-type
galaxies, including 160 S0-S0/a galaxies, 12 ellipticals and 33 Sa
galaxies (+ one later type). The majority of the atlas galaxies belong
to a magnitude-limited (mB ≤ 12.5 mag) sample of 185
Near-InfraRed S0 Survey galaxies. To ensure that misclassified S0s are
not omitted, 25 ellipticals from the Third Reference Catalogue of Bright
Galaxies classified as S0s in the Carnegie Atlas were included in the
sample. The observations were carried out using 3-4 m class telescopes
with subarcsecond pixel resolution (˜0.25 arcsec), and were
obtained in good seeing conditions (full width at half-maximum ˜1
arcsec). The images are 2-3 mag deeper than Two-Micron All-Sky Survey
images, allowing the detection of faint outer discs in S0s. Both visual
and photometric classifications are made, largely following the
classification criteria of de Vaucouleurs. Special attention is paid to
the classification of lenses, which are coded in a more systematic
manner than in any of the previous studies. A new lens type, called a
'barlens', is introduced, possibly forming part of the bar itself. Also,
boxy/peanut/x-shaped structures are identified in many barred galaxies,
even though the galaxies are not seen edge-on, indicating that vertical
thickening is not enough to explain these structures. Photometric
classification includes detection of exponential outer discs or other
structures not directly visible in the images, but becoming clear in
unsharp masking or residual images in decompositions. In our photometric
classification, nuclear bars are assigned for 15 galaxies, which are
overshadowed by bulges in visual classification. The mean Hubble stage
in the near-infrared is found to be similar to that in the optical. We
give dimensions of structure components, and radial profiles of the
position angles and ellipticities, and show deviations from perfect
elliptical isophotes. Shells and ripples, generally assumed to be
manifestations of recent mergers, are detected only in six galaxies.
However, multiple lenses appear in as much as 25 per cent of the atlas
galaxies, which is a challenge to the hierarchical evolutionary picture
of galaxies. Such models need to explain how the lenses were formed and
then survived in multiple merger events that galaxies may have suffered
during their lifetimes.
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