HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Faber–Jackson relation provided the first empirical power-law relation between the luminosity L and the central stellar
velocity dispersion In astronomy, the velocity dispersion (''σ'') is the statistical dispersion of velocities about the mean velocity for a group of astronomical objects, such as an open cluster, globular cluster, galaxy, galaxy cluster, or supercluster. By measurin ...
\sigma of
elliptical galaxy An elliptical galaxy is a type of galaxy with an approximately ellipsoidal shape and a smooth, nearly featureless image. They are one of the four main classes of galaxy described by Edwin Hubble in his Hubble sequence and 1936 work ''The Real ...
, and was presented by the astronomers Sandra M. Faber and Robert Earl Jackson in 1976. Their relation can be expressed mathematically as: : L \propto \sigma^ \gamma with the index \gamma approximately equal to 4. In 1962,
Rudolph Minkowski Rudolph Minkowski (born Rudolf Leo Bernhard Minkowski ; ; May 28, 1895 – January 4, 1976) was a German-American astronomer. Biography Minkowski was the son of Marie Johanna Siegel and physiologist Oskar Minkowski. His uncle was Hermann Min ...
had discovered and wrote that a "correlation between velocity dispersion and uminosityexists, but it is poor" and that "it seems important to extend the observations to more objects, especially at low and medium absolute magnitudes". This was important because the value of \gamma depends on the range of galaxy luminosities that is fitted, with a value of 2 for low-luminosity elliptical galaxies discovered by a team led by Roger Davies, and a value of 5 reported by Paul L. Schechter for luminous elliptical galaxies.Paul L. Schechter (1980)
Mass-to-light ratios for elliptical galaxies
/ref> The Faber–Jackson relation is understood as a projection of the Fundamental Plane of elliptical galaxies. One of its main uses is as a tool for determining distances to external galaxies.


Theory

The
gravitational potential In classical mechanics, the gravitational potential at a location is equal to the work (energy transferred) per unit mass that would be needed to move an object to that location from a fixed reference location. It is analogous to the electric ...
of a mass distribution of radius R and mass M is given by the expression: : U=-\alpha \frac Where α is a constant depending e.g. on the density profile of the system and G is the gravitational constant. For a constant density, \alpha\ = \frac The kinetic energy is: : K = \fracMV^2 = \fracM \sigma^2 (Recall \sigma is the 1-dimensional velocity dispersion. Therefore, 3\sigma^2 = V^2.) From the
virial theorem In mechanics, the virial theorem provides a general equation that relates the average over time of the total kinetic energy of a stable system of discrete particles, bound by potential forces, with that of the total potential energy of the system. ...
(2 K + U = 0 ) it follows : \sigma^2 =\frac\frac. If we assume that the mass to light ratio, M/L, is constant, e.g. M \propto L we can use this and the above expression to obtain a relation between R and \sigma^2: : R \propto\frac. Let us introduce the surface brightness, B = L/(4 \pi R^2) and assume this is a constant (which from a fundamental theoretical point of view, is a totally unjustified assumption) to get : L=4\pi R^2 B. Using this and combining it with the relation between R and L, this results in : L \propto 4\pi\left(\frac\right)^2B and by rewriting the above expression, we finally obtain the relation between luminosity and velocity dispersion: : L \propto\frac, that is : L \propto \sigma^4. Given that massive galaxies originate from homologous merging, and the fainter ones from dissipation, the assumption of constant surface brightness can no longer be supported. Empirically, surface brightness exhibits a peak at about M_V=-23. The revised relation then becomes : L \propto \sigma^ for the less massive galaxies, and : L \propto \sigma^ for the more massive ones. With these revised formulae, the fundamental plane splits into two planes inclined by about 11 degrees to each other. Even first-ranked cluster galaxies do not have constant surface brightness. A claim supporting constant surface brightness was presented by astronomer Allan R. Sandage in 1972 based on three logical arguments and his own empirical data. In 1975, Donald Gudehus showed that each of the logical arguments was incorrect and that first-ranked cluster galaxies exhibited a standard deviation of about half a magnitude.


Estimating distances to galaxies

Like the Tully–Fisher relation, the Faber–Jackson relation provides a means of estimating the distance to a galaxy, which is otherwise hard to obtain, by relating it to more easily observable properties of the galaxy. In the case of elliptical galaxies, if one can measure the central stellar velocity dispersion, which can be done relatively easily by using spectroscopy to measure the Doppler shift of light emitted by the stars, then one can obtain an estimate of the true luminosity of the galaxy via the Faber–Jackson relation. This can be compared to the
apparent magnitude Apparent magnitude () is a measure of the brightness of a star or other astronomical object observed from Earth. An object's apparent magnitude depends on its intrinsic luminosity, its distance from Earth, and any extinction of the object's ...
of the galaxy, which provides an estimate of the
distance modulus The distance modulus is a way of expressing distances that is often used in astronomy. It describes distances on a logarithmic scale based on the astronomical magnitude system. Definition The distance modulus \mu=m-M is the difference between th ...
and, hence, the distance to the galaxy. By combining a galaxy's central velocity dispersion with measurements of its central surface brightness and radius parameter, it is possible to improve the estimate of the galaxy's distance even more. This standard yardstick, or "reduced galaxian radius-parameter", r_g, devised by Gudehus in 1991, can yield distances, free of systematic bias, accurate to about 31%.


See also

*
Fundamental plane (elliptical galaxies) The fundamental plane is a set of bivariate correlations connecting some of the properties of normal elliptical galaxies. Some correlations have been empirically shown. The fundamental plane is usually expressed as a relationship between the ef ...
*
M–sigma relation The M–sigma (or ''M''–''σ'') relation is an empirical correlation between the stellar velocity dispersion ''σ'' of a galaxy bulge and the mass M of the supermassive black hole at its center. The ''M''–''σ'' relation was first presented ...
*
Sigma-D relation The Sigma-D relation, or Σ-D Relation, is the radio surface brightness to diameter relation of a supernova remnant.Urošević, D. et al. (2009Sigma-D relation for supernova remnants and its dependent on the density of the interstellar medium ''Ast ...
*
Tully–Fisher relation In astronomy, the Tully–Fisher relation (TFR) is an empirical relationship between the mass or intrinsic luminosity of a spiral galaxy and its asymptotic rotation velocity or emission line width. It was first published in 1977 by astronomer ...


References


External links


The original paper by Faber & JacksonGudehus's revision of the Faber–Jackson relation
{{DEFAULTSORT:Faber-Jackson relation - Extragalactic astronomy Equations of astronomy