The measure of the size of distant galaxies needs the use of a metric radius, that is a size
independent on the redshift and light profile. We estimated a metric radius based on the
Petrosian function (Petrosian 1976), defined (Kron 1995) as
Abraham et al. (1994) and Abraham et al. (1996) showed that two indexes, namely an
asymmetry index (A) and a central concentration index (
), are very useful in order
to estimate a quantitative galaxy morphology. The former is determined by rotating the galaxy
by 180
and subtracting the resulting image from the original one. The asymmetry index
is given by the sum of absolute values of the pixels in the residual image, normalized by the
sum of the absolute value of the pixels in the original image and corrected for the
intrinsic asymmetry of the background. The concentration index is given by the ratio of
fluxes in two isophotes, based on the analysis of light profiles. The measure of these
indexes is independent of colour, though they correlate well with optical colours.
We therefore computed both the asymmetry and the concentration indexes following Abraham et al. (1994) and Abraham et al. (1996), but also computed a different light concentration parameters.
That is we computed
(Saracco et al. 2000), i.e. the ratio between the flux within radius
and the flux within
.
As discussed by Saracco et al. (1999),
is independent from the redshift of the
source, since it is related to a metric size and is independent of the asymptotic profile.
Brinchmann et al. (1998) on the contrary pointed out that the central concentration
defined by Abraham et al. (1994, 1996) is redshift-dependent.
has been computed in
order to classify our galaxies and compare our results with HDF-North.
We tested the various parameters against apparent magnitude and checked any correlation with
colours (Conselice et al. 2000). We selected two subsamples, composed respectively by
galaxies with both
B450-V606 and
V606-I814 redder or bluer than a local
elliptical or a local irregular galaxy. We used these subsamples as tracers of colours.
FLUX-ISO | FLUXERR-ISO | MAG-ISO | MAGERR-ISO | MTOT | MTOT-ERR | ISOAREA-IMAGE |
0.354 | 0.0012 | 23.21 | 0.0037 | 23.17 | 0.1 | 1027 |
0.037 | 7.9E-4 | 25.64 | 0.022 | 25.61 | 0.1 | 338 |
0.024 | 4.3E-4 | 26.11 | 0.019 | 25.81 | 0.1 | 139 |
0.111 | 7.8E-4 | 24.47 | 0.007 | 24.32 | 0.1 | 470 |
0.035 | 6.2E-4 | 25.70 | 0.019 | 25.47 | 0.1 | 279 |
0.027 | 5.7E-4 | 25.99 | 0.023 | 25.78 | 0.1 | 236 |
0.125 | 8.0E-4 | 24.34 | 0.007 | 24.20 | 0.1 | 507 |
X-IMAGE | Y-IMAGE | ALPHA-J2000 | DELTA-J2000 | X2-IMAGE | Y2-IMAGE | ERRX2-IMAGE |
270.59 | 1900.766 | 338.272981 | -60.555908 | 47.9 | 25.41 | 0.0016 |
290.17 | 1569.351 | 338.272480 | -60.559576 | 44.6 | 29.47 | 0.0252 |
304.80 | 1706.001 | 338.272175 | -60.558062 | 8.2 | 11.51 | 0.0044 |
321.70 | 1995.368 | 338.271847 | -60.554856 | 26.4 | 20.98 | 0.0023 |
372.10 | 1877.157 | 338.270679 | -60.556161 | 27.9 | 15.58 | 0.0189 |
375.62 | 717.7169 | 338.270398 | -60.568997 | 31.6 | 20.41 | 0.0026 |
ERRY2-IMAGE | A-IMAGE | B-IMAGE | ERRA-IMAGE | ERRB-IMAGE | FLAGS | CLASS-STAR |
7.9E-4 | 7.08 | 4.81 | 0.041 | 0.02672239 | 0 | 0.91 |
0.018 | 6.69 | 5.40 | 0.15 | 0.1358412 | 2 | 2.2E-4 |
0.006 | 3.44 | 2.81 | 0.079 | 0.06579173 | 0 | 0.02 |
0.001 | 5.33 | 4.35 | 0.05 | 0.04017934 | 0 | 0.02 |
0.010 | 5.34 | 3.87 | 0.14 | 0.09491127 | 0 | 3.0E-4 |
0.0015 | 5.63 | 4.50 | 0.05 | 0.03895507 | 0 | 0.02 |
SN | B-V | THETA | MUTHETA | CM | C-ABR |
133.95 | 0.53 | 0.1489 | 21.11 | 0.7708 | 0.663 |
25.60 | 0.43 | 0.4587 | 25.5 | 0.7479 | 0.211 |
25.55 | -0.07 | 0.1899 | 24.12 | 0.7705 | 0.321 |
62.89 | 0.52 | 0.2793 | 23.38 | 0.7606 | 0.359 |
22.07 | 0.67 | 0.3213 | 25.08 | 0.7711 | 0.157 |
68.09 | 0.10 | 0.3192 | 23.46 | 0.7829 | 0.352 |
The asymmetry index (Fig. 9) seems not to be biased: the faintest sources are on the whole more symmetric than brighter ones, but the presence of asymmetric objects also in the last bins suggest this feature to be linked to the nature of these galaxies. The trend towards high symmetry may be due to the influence of noise, which makes the profile smoother.
The central concentration index
defined by Abraham et al. (1994, 1996) seems to be
biased against compact sources at faint magnitudes (
I814>24.5), while
does not
correlate with apparent magnitude (Figs. 10-11).
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