We investigate distortions in the velocity fields of disc galaxies and their
use to reveal the dynamical state of interacting galaxies at different
redshift. For that purpose, we model disc galaxies in combined
N-body/hydrodynamic simulations. 2D velocity fields of the gas are extracted
from these simulations which we place at different redshifts from z=0 to z=1 to
investigate resolution effects on the properties of the velocity field. To
quantify the structure of the velocity field we also perform a kinemetry
analysis. If the galaxy is undisturbed we find that the rotation curve
extracted from the 2D field agrees well with long-slit rotation curves. This is
not true for interacting systems, as the kinematic axis is not well defined and
does in general not coincide with the photometric axis of the system. For large
(Milky way type) galaxies we find that distortions are still visible at
intermediate redshifts but partly smeared out. Thus a careful analysis of the
velocity field is necessary before using it for a Tully-Fisher study. For small
galaxies (disc scale length ~2 kpc) even strong distortions are not visible in
the velocity field at z~0.5 with currently available angular resolution.
Therefore we conclude that current distant Tully-Fisher studies cannot give
reliable results for low-mass systems. Additionally to these studies we confirm
the power of near-infrared integral field spectrometers in combination with
adaptive optics (such as SINFONI) to study velocity fields of galaxies at high
redshift (z~2).Comment: 12 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, high
resolution version can be found at
http://astro.uibk.ac.at/~thomas/kronberger.pd