We present a detailed analysis of the properties of warps and
tidally-triggered perturbations perpendicular to the plane of 47
interacting/merging edge-on spiral galaxies. The derived parameters are
compared with those obtained for a sample of 61 non-interacting edge-on
spirals. The entire optical (R-band) sample used for this study was presented
in two previous papers. We find that the scale height of disks in the
interacting/merging sample is characterized by perturbations on both large
(~disk cut-off radius) and short (~z0) scales, with amplitudes of the order of
280pc and 130pc on average, respectively. The size of these large (short)
-scale instabilities corresponds to 14% (6%) of the mean disk scale height.
This is a factor of 2 (1.5) larger than the value found for non-interacting
galaxies. A hallmark of nearly all tidally distorted disks is a scale height
that increases systematically with radial distance. The frequent occurrence and
the significantly larger size of these gradients indicate that disk asymmetries
on large scales are a common and persistent phenomenon, while local
disturbances and bending instabilities decline on shorter timescales. Nearly
all (93%) of the interacting/merging and 45% of the non-interacting galaxies
studied are noticeably warped. Warps of interacting/merging galaxies are ~2.5
times larger on average than those observed in the non-interacting sample, with
sizes of the order of 340pc and 140pc, respectively. This indicates that tidal
distortions do considerably contribute to the formation and size of warps.
However, they cannot entirely explain the frequent occurrence of warped disks.Comment: LaTeX, 35 pages, 6 figures, all figures and appendix of higher
quality available at http://aurora.as.arizona.edu/~schwarz