4.7 Article

An analysis of the composite stellar population in M32

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 396, Issue 2, Pages 624-634

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2009.14722.x

Keywords

stars: atmospheres; stars: evolution; galaxies: abundances; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: stellar content

Funding

  1. European Community under a Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship (6th Framework Programme, FP6)
  2. FAPESP [05/03840-3, 06/56213-9]
  3. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [06/56213-9] Funding Source: FAPESP

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We obtained long-slit spectra of high signal-to-noise ratio of the galaxy M32 with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at the Gemini-North telescope. We analysed the integrated spectra by means of full spectral fitting in order to extract the mixture of stellar populations that best represents its composite nature. Three different galactic radii were analysed, from the nuclear region out to 2 arcmin from the centre. This allows us to compare, for the first time, the results of integrated light spectroscopy with those of resolved colour-magnitude diagrams from the literature. As a main result we propose that an ancient and an intermediate-age population co-exist in M32, and that the balance between these two populations change between the nucleus and outside one effective radius (1r(eff)) in the sense that the contribution from the intermediate population is larger at the nuclear region. We retrieve a smaller signal of a young population at all radii whose origin is unclear and may be a contamination from horizontal branch stars, such as the ones identified by Brown et al. in the nuclear region. We compare our metallicity distribution function for a region 1 to 2 arcmin from the centre to the one obtained with photometric data by Grillmair et al. Both distributions are broad, but our spectroscopically derived distribution has a significant component with [Z/Z(circle dot)] <= -1, which is not found by Grillmair et al.

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