Bibcode
McCall, M. L.; Vaduvescu, O.; Pozo Nunez, F.; Barr Dominguez, A.; Fingerhut, R.; Unda-Sanzana, E.; Li, B.; Albrecht, M.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 540, id.A49
Fecha de publicación:
4
2012
Revista
Número de citas
23
Número de citas referidas
22
Descripción
Aims: Star-forming dwarfs are studied to elucidate the physical
underpinnings of their fundamental plane. Processes controlling dynamics
are evaluated, connections between quiescent and bursting dwarfs are
examined, and the viability of using structural properties of dwarfs to
determine distances is assessed. Methods: Deep surface photometry
in Ks is presented for 19 star-forming dwarfs. The data are
amalgamated with previously published observations to create a sample of
66 galaxies suitable for exploring how global properties and kinematics
are connected. Results: It is confirmed that residuals in the
Tully-Fisher relation are correlated with surface brightness, but that
even after accomodating the surface brightness dependence through the
dwarf fundamental plane, residuals in absolute magnitude are far larger
than expected from observational errors. Rather, a morefundamental plane
is identified which connects the potential to HI line width and surface
brightness. Residuals correlate with the axis ratio in a way which can
be accommodated by recognizing the galaxies to be oblate spheroids
viewed at varying angles. Correction of surface brightnesses to face-on
leads to a correlation among the potential, line width, and surface
brightness for which residuals are entirely attributable to
observational uncertainties. The mean mass-to-light ratio of the diffuse
component of the galaxies is constrained to be 0.88 ± 0.20 in
Ks. Blue compact dwarfs lie in the same plane as dwarf
irregulars. The dependence of the potential on line width is less strong
than expected for virialized systems, but this may be because surface
brightness is acting as a proxy for variations in the mass-to-light
ratio from galaxy to galaxy. Altogether, the observations suggest that
gas motions are predominantly disordered and isotropic, that they are a
consequence of gravity, not turbulence, and that the mass and scale of
dark matter haloes scale with the amount and distribution of luminous
matter. The tight relationship between the potential and observables
offers the promise of determining distances to unresolved star-forming
dwarfs to an accuracy comparable to that provided by the Tully-Fisher
relation for spirals.
Based on observations acquired from CFHT, CTIO, ESO, OAN-SPM, and SAAO.