pith. sign in

arxiv: 0903.2540 · v2 · pith:253KSEQGnew · submitted 2009-03-14 · 🌌 astro-ph.CO

Gravitational potential and X-ray luminosities of early-type galaxies observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra

classification 🌌 astro-ph.CO
keywords galaxiesx-raymassearly-typegravitationalluminositiespotentialprofiles
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

We study dark matter content in early-type galaxies and investigate whether X-ray luminosities of early-type galaxies are determined by the surrounding gravitational potential. We derived gravitational mass profiles of 22 early-type galaxies observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra. Sixteen galaxies show constant or decreasing radial temperature profiles, and their X-ray luminosities are consistent with kinematical energy input from stellar mass loss. The temperature profiles of the other 6 galaxies increase with radius, and their X-ray luminosities are significantly higher. The integrated mass-to-light ratio of each galaxy is constant at that of stars within 0.5-1 r_e, and increases with radius, where r_e is the effective radius of a galaxy. The scatter of the central mass-to-light ratio of galaxies was less in K-band light. At 3r_e, the integrated mass-to-light ratios of galaxies with flat or decreasing temperature profiles are twice the value at 0.5r_e, where the stellar mass dominates, and at 6r_e, these increase to three times the value at 0.5r_e. This feature should reflect common dark and stellar mass distributions in early-type galaxies: Within 3r_e, the mass of dark matter is similar to the stellar mass, while within 6r_e, the former is larger than the latter by a factor of two. By contrast, X-ray luminous galaxies have higher gravitational mass in the outer regions than X-ray faint galaxies. We describe these X-ray luminous galaxies as the central objects of large potential structures; the presence or absence of this potential is the main source of the large scatter in the X-ray luminosity.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.