Near-infrared luminosity function and colours of dwarf galaxies in the Coma Cluster

Abstract

We present K-band observations of the low-luminosity galaxies in the Coma cluster, which are responsible for the steep upturn in the optical luminosity function at MR ~ -16, discovered recently. The main results of this study are (i) The optical-near-infrared colours of these galaxies imply that they are dwarf spheroidals. The median M-K colour for galaxies with -19.3 < MK < -16.3 is 3.6 mag. (ii) The K-band luminosity function in the Coma cluster at the faint-end is not wee constrained, because of the uncertainties due to the field-to-field variance of the background. However, within the estimate large errors, it is consistent with the R-band luminosity function, shifted by 3 magnitudes. (iii) Many of the cluster dwarfs lie in a region of the B-K vs. B-R colour-colour diagram where background galaxies are rare Local dwarf spheroidal galaxies lie in this region too. This suggests that a better measurement of the K-band cluster luminosity function can be made if the field-to-field variance of the background can be measured as a function of colour. (iv) If we assume that none of the galaxies in the region of the B-K vs. B-R plane given in (iii) in our cluster fields are background, and that all the cluster galaxies with 15.5 < K < 18.5 lie in this region of the plane, then we measure alpha = -1.41 +/- 0.35 for -19.3 < MK < -16.3, where alpha is the logarithmic slope of the luminosity function.

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