Abstract:
This thesis presents independently calibrated CCD surface photometry derived from 12 images of the shell galaxy NGC 2865 in the B, V, and R passbands. Short exposures were used to permit accurate sky subtraction. Mean isophotes were derived for each passband over the radial distance range 3"-60". The isophotes are presented in the form of their best-fit (lease-squares) ellipse parameters. The parameters for the best-fit de Vaucouleurs surface brightness law were determined for the mean profile in each passband and deviations of the actual surface brightness profile from the r[superscript 1/4] law are discussed in terms of the galaxy's shell structure. From the best-fit ellipse parameters, the amplitudes of the cos(4[theta]) component of the isophotes could be measured. They do not show the boxiness often observed in a galaxy which had experienced a recent merger. A peak amplitude of about +1 percent (2[sigma]) over the interval of 25"-40" suggests only the presence of a weak disk. If the disk is real it indicates that NGC 2865 is an S0, rather than an elliptical, galaxy. Also, both (B - V) and (B - R) colour gradients were measured and show that the galaxy becomes bluer with increasing radius. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)