83 research outputs found
A Morphological Method to Determine Co-Rotation Radii in Spiral Galaxies
Shock induced star formation in a stellar density wave scenario produces an
azimuthal gradient of ages across the spiral arms which has opposite signs on
either side of the corotation resonance (CR). We present a method based on the
Fourier analysis of azimuthal profiles, to locate the CR and determine the arm
character (trailing or leading) in spiral galaxies. Basically, we compare the
behavior of the phase angle of the two-armed spiral in blue and infrared colors
which pick out respectively young and older disk stellar population. We
illustrate the method using theoretical leading and trailing, spirals. We have
also applied the method to the spiral galaxies NGC 7479, for which we confirm
the reported leading arms, and NGC 1832. In these galaxies we find two and
three CRs respectively.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in ApJL, figures 4 and 6 avaliables
at ftp://ftp.inaoep.mx/pub/salida/puerari, full paper also avaliable at
http://www.inaoep.mx/~puerar
Lopsided spiral galaxies: evidence for gas accretion
We quantify the degree of lopsidedness for a sample of 149 galaxies observed
in the near-infrared from the OSUBGS sample, and try to explain the physical
origin for the observed disk lopsidedness. We confirm previous studies, but now
for a larger sample, that a large fraction of galaxies show significant
lopsidedness in their stellar disks, measured as the Fourier amplitude of the
m=1 component, normalised to the average or m=0 component, in the surface
density. Late-type galaxies are found to be more lopsided, while the presence
of m=2 spiral arms and bars is correlated. The m=1 amplitude is found to be
uncorrelated with the tidal forces acting on a galaxy via nearby companions.
Numerical simulations are carried out to study the generation of m=1 via
different processes: galaxy tidal encounters, galaxy mergers, and external gas
accretion and subsequent star formation. The simulations show that galaxy
interactions and mergers can trigger strong lopsidedness, but do not explain
several independent statistical properties of observed galaxies. To explain all
the observational results, it is required that a large fraction of lopsidedness
results from cosmological accretion of gas on galactic disks, which can create
strongly lopsided disks when this accretion is asymmetrical enough.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics - Final
version after language editio
Formation of rings in galactic discs by infalling small companions
We use N-body simulations to study the formation of rings in a disc galaxy by
the impact of a small spherical companion. Both barred and nonbarred target
discs are considered. We discuss the effect of the properties of the target
disc (distribution of mass in the disc, velocity dispersion, etc.) as well as
of the mass and orbit of the companion on the properties of the rings, such as
their amplitude, width, shape, expansion velocity and lifetime. In particular
the amplitude, width, lifetime and expansion velocity of the first ring
increase considerably with companion mass, and so does the expansion velocity
of the particles in it and the total extent of the disc after the interaction.
We also discuss the formation and evolution of spokes and show that they can be
caused by companions of relatively small mass. In our three examples of oblique
impacts on barred target galaxies we note important transient displacements of
the bar, as well as changes of its pattern speed and size. An asymmetric
pseudoring is formed in each case, and during the first stages of its evolution
the bar forms part of it.Comment: 21 pages Latex, 22 figures, of which 7 as separate gif-files.
Requires mn.sty, accepted for publication in MNRAS. High resolution version
at http://www-obs.cnrs-mrs.fr/dynamique/pap/ring.htm
Dust-penetrated morphology in the high-redshift universe: clues from NGC 922
Results from the Hubble Deep Field (HDF) North and South show a large
percentage of high-redshift galaxies whose appearance falls outside traditional
classification systems. The nature of these objects is poorly understood, but
sub-mm observations indicate that at least some of these systems are heavily
obscured (Sanders 2000). This raises the intriguing possibility that a
physically meaningful classification system for high-redshift galaxies might be
more easily devised at rest-frame infrared wavelengths, rather than in the
optical regime. Practical realization of this idea will become possible with
the advent of the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST). In order to explore
the capability of NGST for undertaking such science, we present NASA-IRTF and
SCUBA observations of NGC 922, a chaotic system in our local Universe which
bears a striking resemblance to objects such as HDF 2-86 (z=0.749) in the HDF
North. If objects such as NGC 922 are common at high-redshifts, then this
galaxy may serve as a local morphological `Rosetta stone' bridging low and
high-redshift populations. In this paper we demonstrate that quantitative
measures of galactic structure are recoverable in the rest-frame infrared for
NGC 922 seen at high redshifts using NGST, by simulating the appearance of this
galaxy at redshifts z=0.7 and z=1.2 in rest-frame K'. Our results suggest that
the capability of efficiently exploring the rest-wavelength IR morphology of
high-z galaxies should probably be a key factor in deciding the final choice of
instruments for the NGST.Comment: 7 pages, 12 Figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. Better version
of the figures can be found at http://www.inaoep.mx/~puerari/ngs
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