4.7 Article

The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Kinematics of Stars and Gas in Brightest Group Galaxies-The Role of Group Dynamics

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 908, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/abd47d

Keywords

Galaxy kinematics; Galaxy rotation; Galaxy evolution; Galaxy groups; Galaxy mergers; Galaxy dynamics

Funding

  1. STFC (UK)
  2. ARC (Australia)
  3. AAO
  4. ICRAR
  5. ARC
  6. STFC
  7. RS
  8. ERS
  9. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship - Australian Government [FT180100066]
  10. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D) [CE170100013]
  11. ARC Laureate Fellowship
  12. ARC Federation Fellowship
  13. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT180100231]
  14. Australian Research Council - Australian Government [DE200100461]
  15. Australian Research Council [DE200100461] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The study investigates the stellar and gas kinematics of the brightest group galaxies (BGGs) in dynamically relaxed and unrelaxed galaxy groups using a sample of 154 galaxies from the SAMI survey. It finds that misalignment between gas and stellar components is more common in BGGs within unrelaxed groups, while regular rotators are more prevalent in relaxed groups. The study suggests that the dynamical state of galaxy groups may influence the kinematics of BGGs, calling for further research with larger samples.
We study the stellar and gas kinematics of the brightest group galaxies (BGGs) in dynamically relaxed and unrelaxed galaxy groups for a sample of 154 galaxies in the SAMI galaxy survey. We characterize the dynamical state of the groups using the luminosity gap between the two most luminous galaxies and the BGG offset from the luminosity centroid of the group. We find that the misalignment between the rotation axis of gas and stellar components is more frequent in the BGGs in unrelaxed groups, although with quite low statistical significance. Meanwhile, galaxies whose stellar dynamics would be classified as regular rotators based on their kinemetry are more common in relaxed groups. We confirm that this dependency on group dynamical state remains valid at fixed stellar mass and Sersic index. The observed trend could potentially originate from a differing BGG accretion history in virialized and evolving groups. Among the halo relaxation probes, the group BGG offset appears to play a stronger role than the luminosity gap on the stellar kinematic differences of the BGGs. However, both the group BGG offset and luminosity gap appear to roughly equally drive the misalignment between the gas and stellar component of the BGGs in one direction. This study offers the first evidence that the dynamical state of galaxy groups may influence the BGG's stellar and gas kinematics, and we call for further studies using a larger sample with higher signal-to-noise.

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