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Issue Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. Ser.
Volume 140, Number 3, December II 1999
Page(s) 327 - 344
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/aas:1999522

DOI: 10.1051/aas:1999522

Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. Ser. 140, 327-344

Fundamental plane distances to early-type field galaxies in the South Equatorial Strip

I. The spectroscopic data

K.R. Müller1,2 - G. Wegner1 - S. Raychaudhury3 - W. Freudling2

Send offprint request: K.R. Müller


1 - Department of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College, 6127 Wilder Laboratory, Hanover, NH 03755, U.S.A.
2 - European Southern Observatory and Space Telescope - European Coordinating Facility, Karl Schwarzschild Str. 2, D-85748 Garching bei München, Germany
3 - Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Ganeshkhind, Pune 411 007, India

Received June 25; accepted September 8, 1999

Abstract:

Radial velocities and central velocity dispersions are derived for 238 E/S0 galaxies from medium-resolution spectroscopy. New spectroscopic data have been obtained as part of a study of the Fundamental Plane distances and peculiar motions of early-type galaxies in three selected directions of the South Equatorial Strip, undertaken in order to investigate the reality of large-scale streaming motion; results of this study have been reported in Müller et al. (1998). The new APM South Equatorial Strip Catalog ( $-17\hbox{$.\!\!^\circ$ }5 < \delta < +2\hbox{$.\!\!^\circ$ }5$) was used to select the sample of field galaxies in three directions: (1) 15h10 - 16h10; (2) 20h30 - 21h50; (3) 00h10 - 01h30. The spectra obtained have a median S/N per $\mbox{\AA}$ of 23, an instrumental resolution (FWHM) of $\sim$ 4 $\mbox{\AA}$, and the spectrograph resolution (dispersion) is $\sim$ 100 km s-1. The Fourier cross-correlation method was used to derive the radial velocities and velocity dispersions. The velocity dispersions have been corrected for the size of the aperture and for the galaxy effective radius. Comparisons of the derived radial velocities with data from the literature show that our values are accurate to 40 km s-1. A comparison with results from J$\o$rgensen et al. (1995) shows that the derived central velocity dispersion have an rms scatter of 0.036 in $\log \sigma$. There is no offset relative to the velocity dispersions of Davies et al. (1987).

Key words: techniques: spectroscopic -- galaxies: distances and redshifts -- galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD -- galaxies: fundamental parameters

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