2,553 research outputs found
The polar-ring galaxies NGC 2685 and NGC 3808B (VV 300)
Polar-ring galaxies (PRG) are among the most interesting examples of interaction between galaxies. A PRG is a galaxy with an elongated main body surrounded by a ring (or a disk) of stars, gas, and dust rotating in a near-polar plane (Schweizer, Whitmore, and Rubin, 1983). Accretion of matter by a massive lenticular galaxy from either intergalactic medium or a companion galaxy is usually considered as an explanation of the observed structure of PRG. In the latter case there are two possibilities: capture and merging of a neighbor galaxy, and accretion of mass from a companion galaxy during a close encounter. Two PRG formation scenarios just mentioned are illustrated here by the results of our observations of the peculiar galaxies NGC 2685 and NGC 3808B
The Stellar Content of the Polar Rings in the Galaxies NGC 2685 and NGC 4650A
We present the results of stellar photometry of polar-ring galaxies NGC 2685
and NGC 4650A, using the archival data obtained with the Hubble Space
Telescope's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. Polar rings of these galaxies were
resolved into ~800 and ~430 stellar objects in the B, V and Ic bands,
considerable part of which are blue supergiants located in the young stellar
complexes. The stellar features in the CM-diagrams are best represented by
isochrones with metallicity Z = 0.008. The process of star formation in the
polar rings of both galaxies was continuous and the age of the youngest
detected stars is about 9 Myr for NGC 2685 and 6.5 Myr for NGC 4650A.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, AJ 2004 February, accepte
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