HCG 16 Revisited: Clues About Galaxy Evolution in Groups

Abstract

We present new spectroscopic observations of 5 galaxies, members of the unusually active compact group HCG 16, observed using the Palomar 5m telescope. The high signal to noise ratios (S/N 70) of the spectra allow us to study the variation of the emission line characteristics and the stellar populations in the nucleus and the circumnuclear regions of the galaxies. The emission line characteristics of these galaxies are complex, varying between Seyfert 2 and LINERs or between LINERs and starbursts. All of the galaxies show traces of intermediate age stellar populations, supporting our previous result that post-starburst galaxies are common in compact groups. The galaxies HCG16--4 and HCG16--5 show double nuclei and therefore could be two cases of recent merger. Our observations support a scenario where HCG 16 was formed by the successive merger of metal poor, low mass galaxies. The galaxies HCG16--1 and HCG16--2, which are more evolved, form the old core of the group. Galaxies HCG16--4 and HCG16--5 are two more recent additions still in a merging phase. Galaxy HCG16--5 is a starburst galaxy which is just beginning to fall into the core. If HCG 16 is representative of compact groups in their early stage, the whole set of observations implies that the formation of compact groups is the result of hierarchical galaxy formation. HCG 16 could be one example of this process operating in the local universe.

0

Turn this paper into a full lesson

ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…