44 research outputs found
Triple Bars and Complex Central Structures in Disk Galaxies
We present an analysis of ground-based and HST images of three early-type
barred galaxies. The first, NGC 2681, may be the clearest example yet of a
galaxy with three concentric bars. The two other galaxies were previously
suggested as triple-barred. Our analysis shows that while NGC 3945 is probably
double-barred, NGC 4371 has only one bar; but both have intriguing central
structures. NGC 3945 has a large, extremely bright disk inside its primary bar,
with patchy dust lanes, a faint nuclear ring or pseudo-ring within the disk,
and an apparent secondary bar crossing the ring. NGC 4371 has a bright nuclear
ring only marginally bluer than the surrounding bulge and bar. There is no
evidence for significant dust or star formation in either of these nuclear
rings. The presence of stellar nuclear rings suggests that the centers of these
galaxies are dynamically cool and disklike.Comment: LaTeX: 6 pages, 3 figures, uses emulateapj.sty. Accepted by
Astrophysical Journal Letters. Version with full-resolution figures available
at: http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~erwin/research
Circumstellar and Circumbinary Disks in Eccentric Stellar Binaries
We explore test particle orbits in the orbital plane of eccentric stellar
binary systems, searching for ``invariant loops'': closed curves that change
shape periodically as a function of binary orbital phase as the test particles
in them move under the stars' gravity. Stable invariant loops play the same
role in this periodically-varying potential as stable periodic orbits do in
stationary potentials; in particular, when dissipation is weak, gas will most
likely follow the non-intersecting loops, while nearby particle orbits librate
around them. We use this method to set bounds on the sizes of disks around the
stars, and on the gap between those and the inner edge of a possible
circumbinary disk. Gas dynamics may impose further restrictions, but our study
sets upper bounds for the size of circumstellar disks, and a lower bound for
the inner radius of a circumbinary disk. We find that circumstellar disks are
sharply reduced as the binary's eccentricity grows. Disks change in size and
shape only marginally with the binary phase, with no strong preference to
increase or decrease at any particular phase. The circumstellar disks in
particular can be quite asymmetric. We compare our results with other numerical
and theoretical results and with observations of the Centauri and
L1551 systems, finding very good agreement. The calculated changes in the
shapes and crowding of the circumstellar orbits can be used to predict how the
disk luminosity and mass inflow should vary with binary phase.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to MNRA
Geometrical and physical properties of circumbinary discs in eccentric stellar binaries
In a previous work, we studied stable configurations for circumstellar discs in eccentric binary systems. We searched for âinvariant loops': closed curves (analogous to stable periodic orbits in time-independent potentials) that change shape with the binary orbital phase, as test particles in them move under the influence of the binary potential. This approach allows us to identify stable configurations when pressure forces are unimportant, and dissipation acts only to prevent gas clouds from colliding with one another. We now extend this work to study the main geometrical properties of circumbinary discs. We have studied more than 100 cases with a range in eccentricity 0 â€e†0.9 and mass ratio 0.1 â€q†0.9. Although gas dynamics may impose further restrictions, our study sets lower stable bounds for the size of the central hole in a simple and computationally cheap way, with a relation that depends on the eccentricity and mass ratio of the central binary. We extend our previous studies and focus on an important component of these systems: circumbinary discs. The radii for stable orbits that can host gas in circumbinary discs are sharply constrained as a function of the binary's eccentricity. The circumbinary disc configurations are almost circular, with eccentricity ed < 0.15, but if the mass ratio is unequal the disc is offset from the centre of mass of the system. We compare our results with other models, and with observations of specific systems like GG Tauri A, UY Aurigae, HD 98800 B, and Fomalhaut, restricting the plausible parameters for the binar
The Stellar and Gas Kinematics of Several Irregular Galaxies
We present long-slit spectra of three irregular galaxies from which we
determinethe stellar kinematics in two of the galaxies (NGC 1156 and NGC 4449)
and ionized-gas kinematics in all three (including NGC 2366). We compare this
to the optical morphology and to the HI kinematics of the galaxies. In the
ionized gas, we see a linear velocity gradient in all three galaxies. In NGC
1156 we also detect a weak linear velocity gradient in the stars of (5+/-1/sin
i) km/s/kpc to a radius of 1.6 kpc. The stars and gas are rotating about the
same axis, but this is different from the major axis of the stellar bar which
dominates the optical light of the galaxy. In NGC 4449 we do not detect
organized rotation of the stars and place an upper limit of (3/sin i) km/s/kpc
to a radius of 1.2 kpc. For NGC 4449, which has signs of a past interaction
with another galaxy, we develop a model to fit the observed kinematics of the
stars and gas. In this model the stellar component is in a rotating disk seen
nearly face-on while the gas is in a tilted disk with orbits whose planes
precess in the gravitational potential. This model reproduces the apparent
counter-rotation of the inner gas of the galaxy. The peculiar orbits of the gas
are presumed due to acquisition of gas in the past interaction.Comment: To be published in ApJ, November 20, 200
The stellar velocity dispersion in the inner 1.3 disk scale-lengths of the irregular galaxy NGC 4449
We present measurements of the stellar velocity dispersion in the inner 1
arcmin radius (1.3 disk scale-lengths) of the irregular galaxy NGC 4449
determined from long-slit absorption-line spectra. The average observed
dispersion is 29 +/-2 km/s, the same as predicted from NGC 4449's luminosity.
No significant rotation in the stars is detected. If we assume a maximum
rotation speed of the stars from the model determined from the gas kinematics
of Hunter et al. (2002), the ratio V_max/sigma_z measured globally is 3. This
ratio is comparable to values measured in spiral galaxies, and implies that the
stellar disk in NGC 4449 is kinematically relatively cold. The intrinsic
minor-to-major axis ratio (b/a)_0 is predicted to be in the range 0.3-0.6,
similar to values derived from the distribution of observed b/a of Im galaxies.
However, V/sigma_z measured locally is 0.5-1.1, and so the circular velocity of
NGC 4449 is comparable or less than the velocity of the stars within the
central 1.3 disk scale-lengths of the galaxy.Comment: To be published in ApJ, Nov 200