NGC 5128 - a nearby laboratory for planetary nebulae in a giant early-type galaxy
Abstract
NGC 5128 at 3.8 Mpc is the nearest large elliptical galaxy and is ideally suited to a detailed study of its planetary nebula population. Two spectroscopic programmes are summarised. More than 1200 PNe candidates are known from imaging campaigns in NGC 5128 and accurate radial velocities of 1070 have been measured with the VLT FLAMES/Giraffe spectrometer. From these data a variety of studies of the galaxy kinematics are enabled, such as search for PN sub-groups, representing the relics of accretion of small galaxies. Emission line spectra were observed with VLT FORS and the light element abundances determined for 40 PNe through photoionization modelling. A spread in O abundance of about 0.9 dex is found but no obvious radial gradient out to 19 kpc. Comparison of the O abundance from these PN with the metallicity for the stellar population in the neighbourhood of the PN will probe the star formation and enrichment history of the galaxy. Full results from this analysis will be presented in a forthcoming paper.
- Publication:
-
Planetary Nebulae: An Eye to the Future
- Pub Date:
- August 2012
- DOI:
- 10.1017/S174392131201109X
- Bibcode:
- 2012IAUS..283..279W
- Keywords:
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- Planetary nebulae: general;
- galaxies: elliptical;
- galaxies: individual (NGC 5128);
- techniques: spectroscopic