4.7 Article

THE VARIATION OF GALAXY MORPHOLOGICAL TYPE WITH ENVIRONMENTAL SHEAR

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 688, Issue 1, Pages 78-84

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/592181

Keywords

cosmology: observations; large-scale structure of universe

Funding

  1. Korean Ministry of Science and Technology [R01-2007-000-10246-0]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Foundation
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea [R01-2007-000-10246-0] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Recent N-body simulations indicate that the assembly history of galactic halos depends on the density of the large-scale environment. This implies that galaxy properties such as age and size of the bulge may also vary with the surrounding large-scale structures, which are characterized by tidal shear as well as density. Using a sample of 15,882 well-resolved nearby galaxies from the Tully catalog and the real-space tidal field reconstructed from the 2MASS Redshift Survey, we investigate the dependence of galaxy morphological type on the shear of the large-scale environment in which they are embedded. We first calculate the large-scale dimensionless overdensities (delta) and ellipticities (e) of the regions where the galaxies are located, classify them according to morphological type, and create subsamples selected at similar delta-values but spanning different ranges in e. We calculate the mean ellipticity, < e >, averaged over each subsample and find a signal of variation of < e > with morphological type: for 0.5 <= delta <= 1.0, elliptical galaxies are preferentially located in regions with low ellipticity; for -0.3 <= delta <= 0.1, the latest-type spirals are preferentially located in regions with high ellipticity. The null hypothesis that the mean ellipticities of the regions where the ellipticals and the latest-type spirals are located are the same as the global mean ellipticity averaged over all types is rejected at the 3 sigma level when -0.3 <= delta <= 0.1. Yet, no signal of a galaxy-shear correlation is found in highly overdense or underdense regions. The observed trend suggests that the formation epochs of galactic halos might be a function of not only halo mass and large-scale density but also large-scale shear. Since the statistical significance of the overall trend is low, a sample of at least 100,000 galaxies is required to verify this correlation.

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