Seminar
    Indiana Jones and where to find relic galaxies   
Abstract
There are galaxies that remain untouched since the ancient
 Universe. These unique objects, the so-called relic galaxies, are several times
 more massive than our Milky Way but with much smaller sizes, and
 containing very old (>10 Gyr) stellar populations. For the very few of
 them already found and analysed (most of them by our IAC colleagues),
 they seem to host "too heavy" central
 super massive black holes, also displaying an overabundance of low mass
 versus high mass stars and retaining their primeval morphologies and
 kinematics. How did they survive until the present day? Simulations
 predict that they reside in galaxy overdensities whose large internal
 random motions prevent galaxies from merging. However, we have not yet
 determined observationally neither the environments these galaxies
 inhabit nor how many there are (their number densities). We make use
 of the GAMA survey, that allows us to conduct a complete
 census of this elusive galaxy population, because of its large area and
 spectroscopic completeness. After inspecting 180 square degrees of the sky
 using the deepest photometric images available, we identified 29
 massive ultracompact galaxies in the nearby Universe (0.02 < z < 0.3),
 that are true windows to the ancient Universe. I will present the first paper
 about this exceptional sample, describing their properties and
highlighting the fact that while some galaxies seem to be satellites
of bigger objects, others are not located in clusters, at odds with the
 theoretical expectations.
 
About the talk
Institute of Astrophysics and Space Sciences (IA)
 
       
    
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