478 research outputs found
Kinematics and dynamics of the "superthin" edge-on disk galaxy IC 5249
We present spectroscopic observations of the stellar motions in the disk of
the superthin edge-on spiral galaxy IC 5249 and re-analyse synthesis
observations of the HI. We find that the HI rotation curve rises initially to
about 90-100 km/s, but contrary to the conclusion of Abe et al. (1999) flattens
well before the edge of the optical disk. Over most part of the optical disk we
have been able to establish that the (tangential) stellar velocity dispersion
is 25-30 km/s. From earlier surface photometry we adopt a value for the radial
scalelength of the disk of 7 +/- 1 kpc, a vertical scaleheight of 0.65 +/- 0.05
kpc and a disk truncation radius of 17 +/- 1 kpc. The very thin appearance of
IC 5249 on the sky is the result of a combination of a low (face-on) surface
brightness, a long scalelength and a a sharp truncation at only about 2.5
scalelengths. From various arguments we derive the stellar velocity dispersions
at a position one radial scalelength as sigma_R about 35 km/s, sigma_{theta}
about 30 km/s and sigma_z about 20 km/s. This is comparable to the values for
the disk of our Galaxy in the solar neighborhood.Comment: 11 pages and 8 figures. Accepted for Astronomy and Astrophysics
(September 2001
The Shape of Dark Matter Haloes II. The Galactus HI Modelling & Fitting Tool
We present a new HI modelling tool called \textsc{Galactus}. The program has
been designed to perform automated fits of disc-galaxy models to observations.
It includes a treatment for the self-absorption of the gas. The software has
been released into the public domain. We describe the design philosophy and
inner workings of the program. After this, we model the face-on galaxy NGC2403,
using both self-absorption and optically thin models, showing that
self-absorption occurs even in face-on galaxies. It is shown that the maximum
surface brightness plateaus seen in Paper I of this series are indeed signs of
self-absorption. The apparent HI mass of an edge-on galaxy can be drastically
lower compared to that same galaxy seen face-on. The Tully-Fisher relation is
found to be relatively free from self-absorption issues.Comment: Accepted for publication by Monthly Notices RAS. Hi-res. version
available at www.astro.rug.nl/~vdkruit/Petersetal-II.pd
NGC 300: an extremely faint, outer stellar disk observed to 10 scale lengths
We have used the Gemini Multi-object Spectrograph (GMOS) on the Gemini South
8m telescope in exceptional conditions (0.6" FWHM seeing) to observe the outer
stellar disk of the Sculptor group galaxy NGC 300 at two locations. At our
point source detection threshold of r' = 27.0 (3-sigma) mag, we trace the
stellar disk out to a radius of 24', or 2.2 R_25 where R_25 is the 25
mag/arcsec**2 isophotal radius. This corresponds to about 10 scale lengths in
this low-luminosity spiral (M_B = -18.6), or about 14.4 kpc at a cepheid
distance of 2.0 +/- 0.07 Mpc. The background galaxy counts are derived in the
outermost field, and these are within 10% of the mean survey counts from both
Hubble Deep Fields. The luminosity profile is well described by a nucleus plus
a simple exponential profile out to 10 optical scale lengths. We reach an
effective surface brightness of 30.5 mag/arcsec**2 (2-sigma) at 55%
completeness which doubles the known radial extent of the optical disk. These
levels are exceedingly faint in the sense that the equivalent surface
brightness in B or V is about 32 mag/arcsec**2. We find no evidence for
truncation of the stellar disk. Only star counts can be used to reliably trace
the disk to such faint levels, since surface photometry is ultimately limited
by nonstellar sources of radiation. In the Appendix, we derive the expected
surface brightness of one such source: dust scattering of starlight in the
outer disk.Comment: ApJ accepted -- 30 pages, 13 figures -- see
ftp://www.aao.gov.au/pub/local/jbh/astro-ph/N300 for full resolution figures
and preprin
The dark matter halo shape of edge-on disk galaxies - II. Modelling the HI observations: methods
This is the second paper of a series in which we attempt to put constraints
on the flattening of dark halos in disk galaxies. For this purpose, we observe
the HI in edge-on galaxies, where it is in principle possible to measure the
force field in the halo vertically and radially from gas layer flaring and
rotation curve decomposition respectively. To calculate the force fields, we
need to analyse the observed XV diagrams to accurately measure all three
functions that describe the planar kinematics and distribution of a galaxy: the
radial HI surface density, the rotation curve and the HI velocity dispersion.
In this paper, we discuss the improvements and limitations of the methods
previously used to measure these HI properties. We extend the constant velocity
dispersion method to include determination of the HI velocity dispersion as a
function of galactocentric radius and perform extensive tests on the quality of
the fits. We will apply this 'radial decomposition XV modelling method' to our
HI observations of 8 HI-rich, late-type, edge-on galaxies in the third paper of
this series.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics. For a higher
resolution version see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~vdkruit/jea3/homepage/12566.pd
Deep CCD Surface Photometry of the Edge-On Spiral NGC 4244
We have obtained deep surface photometry of the edge-on spiral galaxy NGC
4244. Our data reliably reach 27.5 R magnitude arcsec^{-2}, a significant
improvement on our earlier deep CCD surface photometry of other galaxies. NGC
4244 is a nearby Scd galaxy whose total luminosity is approximately one
magnitude fainter than the peak of the Sc luminosity function. We find that it
has a simple structure: a single exponential disk, with a scale height h_Z =
246 +/- 2 pc, a scale length h_R = 1.84 +/- 0.02 kpc and a disk cutoff at a
radius R(max) = 10.0 kpc (5.4 scale lengths). We confirm a strong cutoff in the
stellar disk at R(max), which happens over only 1 kpc. We do not see any
statistically significant evidence for disk flaring with radius. Unlike the
more luminous Sc galaxies NGC 5907 and M 33, NGC 4244 does not show any
evidence for a second component, such as a thick disk or halo, at mu(R) < 27.5
magnitude arcsec^{-2}.Comment: 36 pages, including 12 figures; accepted for publication in Sept 99
A
The Distribution of Dark Matter in a Ringed Galaxy
Outer rings are located at the greatest distance from the galaxy center of
any feature resonant with a bar. Because of their large scale, their morphology
is sensitive to the distribution of the dark matter in the galaxy. We introduce
here how study of these rings can constrain the mass-to-light ratio of the bar,
and so the percentage of dark matter in the center of these galaxies. We
compare periodic orbits integrated in the ringed galaxy NGC 6782 near the outer
Lindblad resonance to the shape of the outer ring. The non-axisymmetric
component of the potential resulting from the bar is derived from a
near-infrared image of the galaxy. The axisymmetric component is derived
assuming a flat rotation curve. We find that the pinched non-self-intersecting
periodic orbits are more elongated for higher bar mass-to-light ratios and
faster bars. The inferred mass-to-light ratio of the bar depends on the assumed
inclination of the galaxy. With an assumed galaxy inclination of i=41 degrees,
for the orbits to be consistent with the observed ring morphology the
mass-to-light ratio of the bar must be high, greater than 70% of a maximal disk
value. For i=45 degrees, the mass-to-light ratio of the bar is of
the maximal disk value. Since the velocity field of these rings can be used to
constrain the galaxy inclination as well as which periodic orbit is represented
in the ring, further study will yield tighter constraints on the mass-to-light
ratio of the bar. If a near maximal disk value for the bar is required, then
either there would be little dark matter within the bar, or the dark matter
contained in the disk of the galaxy would be non-axisymmetric and would rotate
with the bar.Comment: AAS Latex + jpg Figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Structural Parameters of Thin and Thick Disks in Edge-On Disk Galaxies
We analyze the global structure of 34 late-type, edge-on, undisturbed, disk
galaxies spanning a wide range of mass. We measure structural parameters for
the galaxies using two-dimensional least-squares fitting to our -band
photometry. The fits require both a thick and a thin disk to adequately fit the
data. The thick disks have larger scale heights and longer scale lengths than
the embedded thin disks, by factors of ~2 and ~1.25, respectively. The observed
structural parameters agree well with the properties of thick and thin disks
derived from star counts in the Milky Way and from resolved stellar populations
in nearby galaxies. We find that massive galaxies' luminosities are dominated
by the thin disk. However, in low mass galaxies (Vc < 120 km/s), thick disk
stars contribute nearly half of the luminosity and dominate the stellar mass.
Thus, although low mass dwarf galaxies appear blue, the majority of their stars
are probably quite old.
Our data are most easily explained by a formation scenario where the thick
disk is assembled through direct accretion of stellar material from merging
satellites while the thin disk is formed from accreted gas. The baryonic
fraction in the thin disk therefore constrains the gas-richness of the merging
pre-galactic fragments. If we include the mass in HI as part of the thin disk,
the thick disk contains <10% of the baryons in high mass galaxies, and ~25-30%
of the baryons in low-mass galaxies. We discuss how our trends can be explained
by supernova-driven outflow at early times as well as the possibilities for
predicting abundance trends in thick disks, and for removing discrepancies
between semi-analytic galaxy formation models and the observed colors of low
mass galaxies. (abstract abridged)Comment: 25 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in A
van der Kruit to Spitzer: A New Look at the FIR-Radio Correlation
We present an initial look at the far infrared-radio correlation within the
star-forming disks of four nearby, nearly face-on galaxies (NGC~2403, NGC~3031,
NGC~5194, and NGC~6946). Using {\it Spitzer} MIPS imaging and WSRT radio
continuum data, we are able to probe variations in the logarithmic
70~m/22~cm () flux density ratios across each disk at sub-kpc
scales. We find general trends of decreasing with declining surface
brightness and with increasing radius. We also find that the dispersion in
within galaxies is comparable to what is measured {\it globally} among
galaxies at around 0.2 dex. We have also performed preliminary phenomenological
modeling of cosmic ray electron (CR) diffusion using an image-smearing
technique, and find that smoothing the infrared maps improves their correlation
with the radio maps. The best fit smoothing kernels for the two less active
star-forming galaxies (NGC~2403 and NGC~3031) have much larger scale-lengths
than that of the more active star-forming galaxies (NGC~5194 and NGC~6946).
This difference may be due to the relative deficit of recent CR
injection into the interstellar medium (ISM) for the galaxies having largely
quiescent disks.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, To appear in the proceedings of the "Island
Universes: Structure and Evolution of Disk Galaxies" conference held in
Terschelling, Netherlands, July 2005, ed. R. de Jong (Springer: Dordrecht
The Impact of Stellar Migration on Disk Outskirts
Stellar migration, whether due to trapping by transient spirals (churning),
or to scattering by non-axisymmetric perturbations, has been proposed to
explain the presence of stars in outer disks. After a review of the basic
theory, we present compelling, but not yet conclusive, evidence that churning
has been important in the outer disks of galaxies with type II (down-bending)
profiles, while scattering has produced the outer disks of type III
(up-bending) galaxies. In contrast, field galaxies with type I (pure
exponential) profiles appear to not have experienced substantial migration. We
conclude by suggesting work that would improve our understanding of the origin
of outer disks.Comment: Invited review, Book chapter in "Outskirts of Galaxies", Eds. J. H.
Knapen, J. C. Lee and A. Gil de Paz, Astrophysics and Space Science Library,
Springer, in press 39 pages, 15 figure
The dark matter halo shape of edge-on disk galaxies - I. HI observations
This is the first paper of a series in which we will attempt to put
constraints on the flattening of dark halos in disk galaxies. We observe for
this purpose the HI in edge-on galaxies, where it is in principle possible to
measure the force field in the halo vertically and radially from gas layer
flaring and rotation curve decomposition respectively. In this paper, we define
a sample of 8 HI-rich late-type galaxies suitable for this purpose and present
the HI observations.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics. For a higher
resolution version see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~vdkruit/jea3/homepage/12565.pd
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