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Optical and Near-Infrared Imaging of the IRAS 1 Jy Sample of Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies. II. The Analysis

S. Veilleux et al 2002 ApJS 143 315-376   doi: 10.1086/343844  Help

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S. Veilleux1,2, D.-C. Kim3 and D. B. Sanders2,4
1 Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742
2 Visiting Astronomer, W. M. Keck Observatory, jointly operated by the California Institute of Technology and the University of California
3 Current address: School of Earth and Environmental Sciences (BK21), Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
4 Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii, 2680 Woodlawn Drive, Honolulu, HI 96822, and Max-Planck-Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik, D-85740, Garching, Germany
E-mail: veilleux@astro.umd.edu, dckim@astro.snu.ac.kr and sanders@ifa.hawaii.edu

ABSTRACT. An R and K' atlas of the IRAS 1 Jy sample of 118 ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIGs) was presented in a companion paper (our Paper I). The present paper discusses the results from the analysis of these images supplemented with new spectroscopic data obtained at Keck. All but one object in the 1 Jy sample show signs of a strong tidal interaction/merger. Multiple mergers involving more than two galaxies are seen in no more than five of the 118 (<5%) systems. None of the 1 Jy sources is in the first-approach stage of the interaction, and most (56%) of them harbor a single disturbed nucleus and are therefore in the later stages of a merger. Seyfert galaxies (especially those of type 1), warm ULIGs (f25/f60 > 0.2), and the more luminous systems (>1012.5 Lsun) all show a strong tendency to be advanced mergers with a single nucleus.

     The individual galaxies in the binary systems of the 1 Jy sample show a broad distribution in host magnitudes (luminosities) with a mean of -21.02 ± 0.76 mag (0.85img1.gif L*) at R and -23.98 ± 1.25 mag (0.90img2.gif L*) at K', and a R- or K'-band luminosity ratio generally less than ~4. Single-nucleus ULIGs also show a broad distribution in host magnitudes (luminosities) with an average of -21.77 ± 0.92 mag (1.69img3.gif L*) at R and -25.03 ± 0.94 mag (2.36img4.gif) at K'. These distributions overlap considerably with those of quasars. The same statement applies to R-K' colors in ULIG and quasar hosts.

     An analysis of the surface brightness profiles of the host galaxies in single-nucleus sources reveals that about 73% of the R and K' surface brightness profiles are fitted adequately by an elliptical-like R1/4 law. These elliptical-like 1 Jy systems have luminosity and R-band axial ratio distributions that are similar to those of normal (inactive) intermediate-luminosity ellipticals and follow with some scatter the same μe-re relation, giving credence to the idea that some of these objects may eventually become intermediate-luminosity elliptical galaxies if they get rid of their excess gas or transform this gas into stars. These elliptical-like hosts are most common among merger remnants with Seyfert 1 nuclei (83%), Seyfert 2 optical characteristics (69%), or mid-infrared (ISO) AGN signatures (80%). The mean half-light radius of these ULIGs is 4.80 ± 1.37 kpc at R and 3.48 ± 1.39 kpc at K', typical of intermediate-luminosity ellipticals. These values are in excellent agreement with recent quasar measurements obtained at H with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), but they are systematically lower than other HST measurements derived at R. The reason for this discrepancy between the two quasar data sets is not known.

     In general, the results from the present study are consistent with the merger-driven evolutionary sequence "cool ULIGs→warm ULIGs→quasars." However, many exceptions appear to exist to this simple picture (e.g., 46% of the 41 advanced mergers show no obvious signs of Seyfert activity). This underlines the importance of using a large homogeneous sample like the 1 Jy sample to draw statistically meaningful conclusions; the problems of small sample size and/or inhomogeneous selection criteria have plagued many studies of luminous infrared galaxies in the past.

Subject headings: galaxies: active; galaxies: interactions; galaxies: Seyfert; galaxies: starburst; infrared: galaxies

An erratum for this article has been published in 2003 ApJS 147 223

Print publication: Issue 2 (2002 December)
Received 2002 June 6, accepted for publication 2002 July 31

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