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We built models for low bulge mass spiral galaxies (late type as defined by the Hubble classification) using a 3-D self-gravitating model for spiral arms, and analyzed the orbital dynamics as a function of pitch angle, going from 10$deg$ to 60$deg$. Testing undirectly orbital self-consistency, we search for the main periodic orbits and studied the density response. For pitch angles up to approximately $sim 20deg$, the response supports closely the potential permitting readily the presence of long lasting spiral structures. The density response tends to avoid larger pitch angles in the potential, by keeping smaller pitch angles in the corresponding response. Spiral arms with pitch angles larger than $sim 20deg$, would not be long-lasting structures but rather transient. On the other hand, from an extensive orbital study in phase space, we also find that for late type galaxies with pitch angles larger than $sim 50deg$, chaos becomes pervasive destroying the ordered phase space surrounding the main stable periodic and quasi-periodic orbits and even destroying them. This result is in good agreement with observations of late type galaxies, where the maximum observed pitch angle is $sim 50deg$.
The pattern speeds of spiral galaxies are closely related to the flow of material in their disks. Flows that follow the `precessing ellipses paradigm (see e.g., Kalnajs 1973) are likely associated with slowly rotating spirals, which have corotation b
Spiral structure is ubiquitous in the Universe, and the pitch angle of arms in spiral galaxies provide an important observable in efforts to discriminate between different mechanisms of spiral arm formation and evolution. In this paper, we present a
Schwarzschild orbit-based dynamical models are widely used to uncover the internal dynamics of early-type galaxies and globular clusters. Here we present for the first time the Schwarzschild models of late-type galaxies: an SBb galaxy NGC 4210 and an
Spectra of 34 H II regions in the late-type galaxies NGC1087, NGC2967, NGC3023, NGC4030, NGC4123, and NGC4517A were observed with the South African Large Telescope (SALT). In all 34 H II regions, oxygen abundances were determined through the counterp
We examine $8mu$m IRAC images of the grand design two-arm spiral galaxies M81 and M51 using a new method whereby pitch angles are locally determined as a function of scale and position, in contrast to traditional Fourier transform spectral analyses w