2,288 research outputs found
The Bar Pattern Speed of NGC 1433 Estimated Via Sticky-Particle Simulations
We present detailed numerical simulations of NGC 1433, an intermediate-type
barred spiral showing strong morphological features including a secondary bar,
nuclear ring, inner ring, outer pseudoring, and two striking, detached spiral
arcs known as ``plumes.'' This galaxy is an ideal candidate for recreating the
observed morphology through dynamical models and determining the pattern speed.
We derived a gravitational potential from an -band image of the galaxy and
simulated the behavior of a two-dimensional disk of 100,000 inelastically
colliding gas particles. We find that the closest matching morphology between a
-band image and a simulation occurs with a pattern speed of 0.89 km s
arcsec 5-10%. We also determine that the ratio of corotation
radius to the average published bar radius is 1.7 0.3, with the ambiguity
in the bar radius being the largest contributor to the error.Comment: Accepted for publication by The Astronomical Journal. 34 pages, 13
figures, 2 table
On the nature of the barlens component in barred galaxies: what do boxy/peanut bulges look like when viewed face-on?
Barred galaxies have interesting morphological features whose presence and
properties set constraints on galactic evolution. Here we examine barlenses,
i.e. lens-like components whose extent along the bar major axis is shorter than
that of the bar and whose outline is oval or circular. We identify and analyse
barlenses in -body plus SPH simulations, compare them extensively with those
from the NIRS0S (Near-IR S0 galaxy survey) and the SG samples (Spitzer
Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies) and find very good agreement. We
observe barlenses in our simulations from different viewing angles. This
reveals that barlenses are the vertically thick part of the bar seen face-on,
i.e. a barlens seen edge-on is a boxy/peanut/X bulge. In morphological studies,
and in the absence of kinematics or photometry, a barlens, or part of it, may
be mistaken for a classical bulge. Thus the true importance of classical
bulges, both in numbers and mass, is smaller than currently assumed, which has
implications for galaxy formation studies. Finally, using the shape of the
isodensity curves, we propose a rule of thumb for measuring the barlens extent
along the bar major axis of moderately inclined galaxies, thus providing an
estimate of which part of the bar is thicker.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, revised version as published in MNRA
A monolithic collapse origin for the thin/thick disc structure of ESO 243-49
ESO 243-49 is a high-mass (circular velocity ) edge-on S0 galaxy in the Abell 2877 cluster at a distance of
. To elucidate the origin of its thick disc, we use MUSE
science verification data to study its kinematics and stellar populations. The
thick disc emits of the light at heights in excess of
(). The rotation velocities of its stars
lag by compared to those in the thin disc, which is
compatible with the asymmetric drift. The thick disc is found to be more
metal-poor than the thin disc, but both discs have old ages. We suggest an
internal origin for the thick disc stars in high-mass galaxies. We propose that
the thick disc formed either first in a turbulent phase with a high
star formation rate and that a thin disc formed shortly afterwards, or because of the dynamical heating of a thin pre-existing component. Either
way, the star formation in ESO 243-49 was quenched just a few Gyrs after the
galaxy was born and the formation of a thin and a thick disc must have occurred
before the galaxy stopped forming stars. The formation of the discs was so fast
that it could be described as a monolithic collapse where several generations
of stars formed in a rapid succession.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. The reduced data-cube as well as the
data necessary to build the kinematic and stellar population maps are
available at
https://etsin.avointiede.fi/dataset/urn-nbn-fi-csc-kata2016092414291163237
Catalogue of the morphological features in the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies (SG)
A catalogue of the morphological features for the complete Spitzer Survey of
Stellar Structure in Galaxies (SG), including 2352 nearby galaxies, is
presented. The measurements are made using 3.6 m images, largely tracing
the old stellar population; at this wavelength the effects of dust are also
minimal. The measured features are the sizes, ellipticities, and orientations
of bars, rings, ringlenses, and lenses. Measured in a similar manner are also
barlenses (lens-like structures embedded in the bars), which are not lenses in
the usual sense, being rather the more face-on counterparts of the boxy/peanut
structures in the edge-on view. In addition, pitch angles of spiral arm
segments are measured for those galaxies where they can be reliably traced.
More than one pitch angle may appear for a single galaxy. All measurements are
made in a human-supervised manner so that attention is paid to each galaxy. We
used isophotal analysis, unsharp masking, and fitting ellipses to measured
structures. We find that the sizes of the inner rings and lenses normalized to
barlength correlate with the galaxy mass: the normalized sizes increase toward
the less massive galaxies; it has been suggested that this is related to the
larger dark matter content in the bar region in these systems. Bars in the low
mass galaxies are also less concentrated, likely to be connected to the mass
cut-off in the appearance of the nuclear rings and lenses. We also show
observational evidence that barlenses indeed form part of the bar, and that a
large fraction of the inner lenses in the non-barred galaxies could be former
barlenses in which the thin outer bar component has dissolved.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Evaluation of Transfected HEP-2 Cell Line Using ß-Galactosidase Reporter Assay System
Liposome-mediated transfection of cancer cells provide a valuable experimental technique to study cellular gene expression and may also be adapted for gene therapy studies. However, the widely recognized advantage of liposome-mediated transfection is high efficiency. Therefore, this study were performed to optimize transfection techniques in human larynx carcinoma cell line Hep-2 using the commercial synthetic lipid TransFast™ Reagent and monitoring the expression efficiency by using the pSV-?-galactosidase Control Vector which encoded ?-galactosidase, maximum transfection efficiency were achieved with TransFast™ Reagent used at the Charge ratios of 2:1 and 0.5 µg DNA/ml, this is indicate that TransFast™ Reagent can be used as an efficient transfection agent to deliver foreign DNA into human larynx carcinoma cell line Hep-2 and expression of the transgene efficiently
Dynamical Simulations of NGC 2523 and NGC 4245
We present dynamical simulations of NGC 2523 and NGC 4245, two barred
galaxies (types SB(r)b and SB(r)0/a, respectively) with prominent inner rings.
Our goal is to estimate the bar pattern speeds in these galaxies by matching a
sticky-particle simulation to the -band morphology, using near-infrared
-band images to define the gravitational potentials. We compare the
pattern speeds derived by this method with those derived in our previous paper
using the well-known Tremaine-Weinberg continuity equation method. The inner
rings in these galaxies, which are likely to be resonance features, help to
constrain the dynamical models. We find that both methods give the same pattern
speeds within the errors.Comment: 29 pages, 3 tables, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journa
Statistics of the structure components in S0s: implications for bar induced secular evolution
The fractions and dimension of bars, rings and lenses are studied in the
Near-IR S0 galaxy Survey (NIRS0S). We find evidence that multiple lenses in
some barred S0s are related to bar resonances in a similar manner as the inner
and outer rings, for which the outer/inner length ratio 2. Inner lenses in the
non-barred galaxies normalized to galaxy diameter are clearly smaller than
those in the barred systems. Interestingly, these small lenses in the
non-barred galaxies have similar sizes as barlenses (lens-like structures
embedded in a bar), and therefore might actually be barlenses in former barred
galaxies, in which the outer, more elongated bar component, has been destroyed.
We also find that fully developed inner lenses are on average a factor 1.3
larger than bars, whereas inner rings have similar sizes as bars. The fraction
of inner lenses is found to be constant in all family classes (A, AB, B).
Nuclear bars appear most frequently among the weakly barred (AB) galaxies,
which is consistent with the theoretical models by Maciejewski & Athanassoula
(2008). Similar sized bars as the nuclear bars were detected in seven
'non-barred' S0s. Galaxy luminosity does not uniquely define the sizes of bars
or bar-related structures, neither is there any upper limit in galaxy
luminosity for bar formation. Although all the family classes cover the same
range of galaxy luminosity, the non-barred (A) galaxies are on average 0.6 mag
brighter than the strongly barred (B) systems. Overall, our results are
consistent with the idea that bars play an important role in the formation of
the structure components of galaxies. The fact that multiple lenses are common
in S0s, and that at least the inner lenses can have very old stellar
populations, implies that the last destructive merger, or major gas accretion
event, must have taken place at a fairly high redshift.Comment: 36 pages (include 13 figures, 11 tables). Accepted to MNRAS 2013 Jan
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