Description
We measure the stellar populations as a function of the radius for 90 early-type galaxies (ETGs) in the MASSIVE survey, a volume-limited integral-field spectroscopic (IFS) galaxy survey targeting all northern-sky ETGs with an absolute K-band magnitude of M_K_{<}-25.3mag or a stellar mass of M_*_>~4x10^11^M_{sun}_, within 108Mpc. We are able to measure reliable stellar population parameters for individual galaxies out to 10-20kpc (1-3R_e_) depending on the galaxy. Focusing on ~R_e_ (~10kpc), we find significant correlations between the abundance ratios, {sigma}, and M^*^ at a large radius, but we also find that the abundance ratios saturate in the highest-mass bin. We see a strong correlation between the kurtosis of the line-of-sight velocity distribution (h4) and the stellar population parameters beyond R_e_. Galaxies with higher radial anisotropy appear to be older, with metal-poorer stars and enhanced [{alpha}/Fe]. We suggest that the higher radial anisotropy may derive from more accretion of small satellites. Finally, we see some evidence for correlations between environmental metrics (measured locally and on >5Mpc scales) and the stellar populations, as expected if satellites are quenched earlier in denser environments.
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