Volume 328, Issue 1 pp. 277-282

The nature of the dwarf population in Abell 868

Peter J. Boyce

Corresponding Author

Peter J. Boyce

1 Astrophysics Group, Department of Physics, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol, BS8 1TL

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Steven Phillipps

Steven Phillipps

1 Astrophysics Group, Department of Physics, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol, BS8 1TL

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J. Bryn Jones

J. Bryn Jones

2 Astronomy Group, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD

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Simon P. Driver

Simon P. Driver

3 School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St Andrews, North Haugh, St Andrews, KY16 9SS

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Rodney M. Smith

Rodney M. Smith

4 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Wales Cardiff, PO Box 913, Cardiff, CF2 3YB

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Warrick J. Couch

Warrick J. Couch

5 School of Physics, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

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First published: 07 July 2008
Citations: 6

Abstract

We present the results of a study of the morphology of the dwarf galaxy population in Abell 868, a rich, intermediate-redshift inline image cluster which has a galaxy luminosity function (LF) with a steep faint-end slope inline image. A statistical background subtraction method is employed to study the inline image colour distribution of the cluster galaxies. This distribution suggests that the galaxies contributing to the faint-end of the measured cluster LF can be split into three populations: dwarf irregular galaxies (dIrrs) with inline image dwarf elliptical galaxies (dEs) with inline image and contaminating background giant ellipticals (gEs) with inline image. The removal of the contribution of the background gEs from the counts only marginally lessens the faint-end slope inline image. However, the removal of the contribution of the dIrrs from the counts produces a flat LF inline image. The dEs and the dIrrs have similar spatial distributions within the cluster, except that the dIrrs appear to be totally absent within a central projected radius of about 0.2 Mpc inline image. The number densities of both dEs and dIrrs appear to fall off beyond a projected radius of ≃ 0.35 Mpc. We suggest that the dE and dIrr populations of A868 have been associated with the cluster for similar time-scales, but evolutionary processes such as ‘galaxy harassment’ tend to fade the dIrr galaxies while having a much smaller effect on the dE galaxies. The harassment would be expected to have the greatest effect on dwarfs residing in the central parts of the cluster.

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