77 research outputs found

    The Circumnuclear Ring of Ionized Gas in NGC3593

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    We present the results of narrow-band Halpha+NII imaging of the early-type spiral NGC3593 in combination with a study of the flux radial profiles of the NII (lambda: 654.80, 658.34 nm), Halpha, and SII (lambda: 671.65, 673.08 nm) emission lines along its major axis. The galaxy is known to contain two counterrotating stellar discs of different size and luminosity. We find that the Halpha emission mainly derives from a small central region of 57 arcsec x 25 arcsec. It consists of a filamentary pattern with a central ring. This has a diameter of about 17 arcsec (~ 0.6/h kpc) and it contributes about half of the total Halpha flux. The ring is interpreted as the result of the interaction between the acquired retrograde gas which later formed the smaller counterrotating stellar disc and the pre-existing prograde gas of the galaxy.Comment: Accepted for pubblication in Astronomy and Astrophysics; one latex file (corsini.tex), and 2 encapsulated postscript figures (corsini_fig1.ps,corsini_fig2.ps). To be compiled with aa.cls latex2e macro style (pslatex option): 6 pages after latex compilatio

    The bulge-disk orthogonal decoupling in galaxies: NGC 4698 and NGC 4672

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    We report the case of the geometrical and kinematical decoupling between the bulge and the disk of the Sa galaxy NGC 4698. The R-band isophotal map of this spiral shows that the bulge structure is elongated perpendicularly to the major axis of the disk. At the same time a central stellar velocity gradient is found along the major axis of the bulge. We also present the Sa NGC 4672 as good candidate of a spiral hosting a bulge and a disk orthogonally decoupled with respect to one other. This decoupling of the two fundamental components of a visible galaxy suggests that the disk could represent a second event in the history of early-type spirals.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (LaTeX, cupconf.sty). To appear in "The Formation of Bulges" C. M. Carollo, H. C. Ferguson, R. F. G. Wyse (eds.), Cambridge University Pres

    Mixed Early and Late-Type Properties in the Bar of NGC 6221: Evidence for Evolution along the Hubble Sequence?

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    Rotation curves and velocity dispersion profiles are presented for both the stellar and gaseous components along five different position angles (P.A.=5, 50, 95, 125 and 155 degrees) of the nearby barred spiral NGC 6221. The observed kinematics extends out to about 80" from the nucleus. Narrow and broad-band imaging is also presented. The radial profiles of the fluxes ratio [NII]/Halpha reveal the presence of a ring-like structure of ionized gas, with a radius of about 9" and a deprojected circular velocity of about 280 km/s. The analysis of the dynamics of the bar indicates this ring is related to the presence of an inner Lindblad resonance (ILR) at 1.3 kpc. NGC6221 is found to exhibit intermediate properties between those of the early-type barred galaxies: the presence of a gaseous ring at an ILR, the bar edge located between the ILR's and the corotation radius beyond the steep rising portion of the rotation curve, the dust-lane pattern, and those of the late-type galaxies: an almost exponential surface brightness profile, the presence of Halpha regions along all the bar, the spiral-arm pattern. It is consistent with scenarios of bar-induced evolution from later to earlier-type galaxies.Comment: 1 File ds7406.tar.gz which contains: one latex file (ds7406.tex), and 10 encsulated postscript figures (ds7406f**.eps). To be compiled with aa-l latex2e macro style. To be published in A&A Sup. Serie

    Near infrared and optical morphology of the dusty galaxy NGC972

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    Near infrared (NIR) and optical surface photometric analyses of the dusty galaxy NGC972 are presented. The photometric profiles in the BVRJHK bands can be fitted with a combination of gaussian and exponential profiles, corresponding to a starburst nucleus and a stellar disk respectively. The exponential scale length in the B-band is 2.8 times larger than in the K-band, which implies a central B-band optical depth as high as 11. A bulge is absent even in the NIR bands and hence the galaxy must be of a morphological type later than the usually adopted Sb type. Relatively low rotational velocity and high gas content also favor a later type, probably Sd, for the galaxy. Only one arm can be traced in the distribution of old stars; the second arm, however, can be traced in the distribution of dust and HII regions. Data suggest a short NIR bar, which ends inside the nuclear ring. The slowly rising nature of the rotation curve rules out a resonance origin of the the nuclear ring. The ring is most likely not in the plane of the galaxy, given its circular appearance in spite of the moderately high inclination of the galaxy. The off-planar nature of the star forming ring, the unusually high fraction (30%) of the total mass in molecular form, the presence of a nuclear starburst and the asymmetry of spiral arms, are probably the result of a merger with a gas-rich companion galaxy.Comment: Uses aas2pp4.sty and epsfig.sty, 12 pages To appear in Astronomical Journal, October 199

    Modeling gas and stellar kinematics in disc galaxies

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    We present V-band surface photometry and major-axis kinematics of stars and ionized gas of three early-type spiral galaxies, namely NGC 772, NGC 3898 and NGC 7782. For each galaxy we built a self-consistent Jeans model for the stellar kinematics, adopting the light distribution of bulge and disc derived by means of a two-dimensional parametric photometric decomposition. This allowed us to investigate the presence of non-circular gas motions, and derive the mass distribution of luminous and dark matter in these objects. We found that the observed gas rotation corresponds to the circular velocity except for the innermost region (|r|<8") of NGC 3898. This behaviour is quite common, although not ubiquitous, in the few bulge-dominated galaxies, for which dynamical modeling allows the comparison between the gas velocity and the circular speed.Comment: 1 single page, 1 encapsulated figure. Poster contribution at the Euroconference "The Evolution of Galaxies. I- Observational clues.", held in Granada (Spain), May 23-27 2000. To be published as a special issue of Astrophysics and Space Scienc
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