TY - JOUR
T1 - The Millennium Galaxy Catalogue: morphological classification and bimodality in the colour-concentration plane
AU - Driver, Simon Peter
AU - Allen, P D
AU - Graham, Alister W
AU - Cameron, E
AU - Liske, J
AU - Ellis, S C
AU - Cross, N J G
AU - De Propris, R
AU - Phillipps, S
AU - Couch, W J
N1 - The Millennium Galaxy Catalogue is a survey led by Driver. This paper presents a new observational discovery on colour-strcuture bimosality identified by Driver.
PY - 2006/5/1
Y1 - 2006/5/1
N2 - Using 10 095 galaxies (B < 20 mag) from the Millennium Galaxy Catalogue, we derive B-band luminosity distributions and selected bivariate brightness distributions for the galaxy population subdivided by eyeball morphology; Sersic index (n); two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) eta parameter; rest-(u-r) colour (global and core); MGC continuum shape; half-light radius; (extrapolated) central surface brightness; and inferred stellar mass-to-light ratio. All subdivisions extract highly correlated subsets of the galaxy population which consistently point towards two overlapping distributions: an old, red, inert, predominantly luminous, high central-surface brightness subset; and a young, blue, star forming, intermediate surface brightness subset. A clear bimodality in the observed distribution is seen in both the rest->(u-r)colour and log (n) distributions. Whilst the former bimodality was well established from Sloan Digital Sky Survey data, we show here that the rest-(u-r) colour bimodality becomes more pronounced when using the core colour as opposed to global colour. The two populations are extremely well separated in the colour-log(n) plane. Using our sample of 3314 (B < 19 mag) eyeball classified galaxies, we show that the bulge-dominated, early-type galaxies populate one peak and the bulge-less, late-type galaxies occupy the second. The early- and mid-type spirals sprawl across and between the peaks. This constitutes extremely strong evidence that the fundamental way to divide the luminous galaxy population (M-BMGC- 5 log h < -16 mag, i.e. dwarfs not included) is into bulges (old red, inert, high concentration) and discs (young, blue, star forming, low concentration) and that the galaxy bimodality reflects the two-component nature of galaxies and not two distinct galaxy classes. We argue that these two components require two independent formation mechanisms/processes and advocate early bulge formation through initial collapse and ongoing disc formation through splashback, infall and merging/accretion. We calculate the B-band luminosity densities and stellar mass densities within each subdivision and estimate that the z approximate to 0 stellar mass content in spheroids, bulges and discs is 35 +/- 2, 18 +/- 7 and 47 +/- 7 per cent, respectively.
AB - Using 10 095 galaxies (B < 20 mag) from the Millennium Galaxy Catalogue, we derive B-band luminosity distributions and selected bivariate brightness distributions for the galaxy population subdivided by eyeball morphology; Sersic index (n); two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) eta parameter; rest-(u-r) colour (global and core); MGC continuum shape; half-light radius; (extrapolated) central surface brightness; and inferred stellar mass-to-light ratio. All subdivisions extract highly correlated subsets of the galaxy population which consistently point towards two overlapping distributions: an old, red, inert, predominantly luminous, high central-surface brightness subset; and a young, blue, star forming, intermediate surface brightness subset. A clear bimodality in the observed distribution is seen in both the rest->(u-r)colour and log (n) distributions. Whilst the former bimodality was well established from Sloan Digital Sky Survey data, we show here that the rest-(u-r) colour bimodality becomes more pronounced when using the core colour as opposed to global colour. The two populations are extremely well separated in the colour-log(n) plane. Using our sample of 3314 (B < 19 mag) eyeball classified galaxies, we show that the bulge-dominated, early-type galaxies populate one peak and the bulge-less, late-type galaxies occupy the second. The early- and mid-type spirals sprawl across and between the peaks. This constitutes extremely strong evidence that the fundamental way to divide the luminous galaxy population (M-BMGC- 5 log h < -16 mag, i.e. dwarfs not included) is into bulges (old red, inert, high concentration) and discs (young, blue, star forming, low concentration) and that the galaxy bimodality reflects the two-component nature of galaxies and not two distinct galaxy classes. We argue that these two components require two independent formation mechanisms/processes and advocate early bulge formation through initial collapse and ongoing disc formation through splashback, infall and merging/accretion. We calculate the B-band luminosity densities and stellar mass densities within each subdivision and estimate that the z approximate to 0 stellar mass content in spheroids, bulges and discs is 35 +/- 2, 18 +/- 7 and 47 +/- 7 per cent, respectively.
KW - surveys
KW - galaxies
KW - fundamental parameters
KW - galaxies : luminosity function, mass function
KW - galaxies : statistics
KW - DIGITAL SKY SURVEY
KW - ARTIFICIAL NEURAL-NETWORKS
KW - LUMINOSITY FUNCTION
KW - REDSHIFT SURVEY
KW - DISK GALAXIES
KW - STRUCTURAL PARAMETERS
KW - SPACE DENSITY
KW - STELLAR MASS
KW - DATA RELEASE
KW - BLACK-HOLE
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33645808669&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10126.x
U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10126.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10126.x
M3 - Article
SN - 0035-8711
VL - 368
SP - 414
EP - 434
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
IS - 1
ER -