277 research outputs found
Testing Modified Newtonian Dynamics with Rotation Curves of Dwarf and Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
Dwarf and low surface brightness galaxies are ideal objects to test modified
Newtonian dynamics (MOND), because in most of these galaxies the accelerations
fall below the threshold below where MOND supposedly applies. We have selected
from the literature a sample of 27 dwarf and low surface brightness galaxies.
MOND is successful in explaining the general shape of the observed rotation
curves for roughly three quarters of the galaxies in the sample presented here.
However, for the remaining quarter, MOND does not adequately explain the
observed rotation curves. Considering the uncertainties in distances and
inclinations for the galaxies in our sample, a small fraction of poor MOND
predictions is expected and is not necessarily a problem for MOND. We have also
made fits taking the MOND acceleration constant, a_0, as a free parameter in
order to identify any systematic trends. We find that there appears to be a
correlation between central surface brightness and the best-fit value of a_0,
in the sense that lower surface brightness galaxies tend to have lower a_0.
However, this correlation depends strongly on a small number of galaxies whose
rotation curves might be uncertain due to either bars or warps. Without these
galaxies, there is less evidence of a trend, but the average value we find for
a_0 ~ 0.7*10^-8 cm s^-2 is somewhat lower than derived from previous studies.
Such lower fitted values of a_0 could occur if external gravitational fields
are important.Comment: 12 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
The vertical extent and kinematics of the HI in NGC 2403
The neutral hydrogen line profiles along the major axis of the nearby spiral
galaxy NGC 2403 show a wing towards the sytemic velocity. This asymmetry can be
explained with the presence of an abnormally thick HI disk (FWHM ~ 5 kpc) or
with a two-component structure: a thin disk and a slowly rotating, thicker (1-3
kpc) HI layer. The latter model gives a better representation of the
observations. These results throw a new light on the disk-halo connection. In
particular, the decrease of rotational velocity with height above the plane may
be the result of a galactic fountain flow. A vertically extended, slowly
rotating HI layer may be common among spiral galaxies with high levels of star
formation.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics Letter
The rotation curves shapes of late-type dwarf galaxies
We present rotation curves derived for a sample of 62 late-type dwarf
galaxies that have been observed as part of the Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral
and Irregular Galaxies (WHISP) project. The rotation curves were derived by
interactively fitting model data cubes to the observed cubes, taking rotation
curve shape, HI distribution, inclination, and the size of the beam into
account. This makes it possible to correct for the effects of beam smearing.
The dwarf galaxies in our sample have rotation-curve shapes that are similar to
those of late-type spiral galaxies, in the sense that their rotation curves,
when expressed in units of disk scale lengths, rise as steeply in the inner
parts and start to flatten at two disk scale lengths. None of the galaxies in
our sample have solid-body rotation curves that extend beyond three scale
lengths. The logarithmic outer rotation curve slopes are similar between
late-type dwarf and spiral galaxies. Thus, whether the flat part of the
rotation curve is reached seems to depend more on the extent of the rotation
curve than on its amplitude. We also find that the outer rotation curve shape
does not strongly depend on luminosity, at least for galaxies fainter than
M_R~-19. We find that in spiral galaxies and in the central regions of
late-type dwarf galaxies, the shape of the central distribution of light and
the inner rise of the rotation curve are related. This implies that galaxies
with stronger central concentrations of light also have higher central mass
densities, and it suggests that the luminous mass dominates the gravitational
potential in the central regions, even in low surface brightness dwarf
galaxies.Comment: 22 pages, 2009 A&A 493, 87
High Resolution Rotation Curves of Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
High resolution Halpha rotation curves are presented for five low surface
brightness galaxies. These Halpha rotation curves have shapes different from
those previously derived from HI observations, probably because of the higher
spatial resolution of the Halpha observations. The Halpha rotation curves rise
more steeply in the inner parts than the HI rotation curves and reach a flat
part beyond about two disk scale lengths. With radii expressed in optical disk
scale lengths, the rotation curves of the low surface brightness galaxies
presented here and those of HSB galaxies have almost identical shapes. Mass
modeling shows that the contribution of the stellar component to the rotation
curves may be scaled to explain most of the inner parts of the rotation curves,
albeit with high stellar mass-to-light ratios. On the other hand, well fitting
mass models can also be obtained with lower contributions of the stellar disk.
These observations suggest that the luminous mass density and the total mass
density are coupled in the inner parts of these galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Bose-Einstein Condensates in Strongly Disordered Traps
A Bose-Einstein condensate in an external potential consisting of a
superposition of a harmonic and a random potential is considered theoretically.
From a semi-quantitative analysis we find the size, shape and excitation
energy as a function of the disorder strength. For positive scattering length
and sufficiently strong disorder the condensate decays into fragments each of
the size of the Larkin length . This state is stable over a large
range of particle numbers. The frequency of the breathing mode scales as
. For negative scattering length a condensate of size
may exist as a metastable state. These finding are generalized to anisotropic
traps
The Link between the Baryonic Mass Distribution and the Rotation Curve Shape
The observed rotation curves of disc galaxies, ranging from late-type dwarf
galaxies to early-type spirals, can be fit remarkably well simply by scaling up
the contributions of the stellar and HI discs. This `baryonic scaling model'
can explain the full breadth of observed rotation curves with only two free
parameters. For a small fraction of galaxies, in particular early-type spiral
galaxies, HI scaling appears to fail in the outer parts, possibly due to
observational effects or ionization of the HI. The overall success of the
baryonic scaling model suggests that the well-known global coupling between the
baryonic mass of a galaxy and its rotation velocity (known as the baryonic
Tully-Fisher relation), applies at a more local level as well, and it seems to
imply a link between the baryonic mass distribution and the distribution of
total mass (including dark matter).Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular Galaxies I. HI Imaging of Late-type Dwarf Galaxies
Neutral hydrogen observations with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
are presented for a sample of 73 late-type dwarf galaxies. These observations
are part of the WHISP project (Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular
Galaxies). Here we present HI maps, velocity fields, global profiles and radial
surface density profiles of HI, as well as HI masses, HI radii and line widths.
For the late-type galaxies in our sample, we find that the ratio of HI extent
to optical diameter, defined as 6.4 disk scale lengths, is on average 1.8+-0.8,
similar to that seen in spiral galaxies. Most of the dwarf galaxies in this
sample are rich in HI, with a typical M_HI/L_B of 1.5. The relative HI content
M_HI/L_R increases towards fainter absolute magnitudes and towards fainter
surface brightnesses. Dwarf galaxies with lower average HI column densities
also have lower average optical surface brightnesses. We find that lopsidedness
is as common among dwarf galaxies as it is in spiral galaxies. About half of
the dwarf galaxies in our sample have asymmetric global profiles, a third has a
lopsided HI distribution, and about half shows signs of kinematic lopsidedness.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 18 pages. 39 MB version with all
figures is available http://www.robswork.net/publications/WHISPI.ps.g
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