ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Box/peanut-shaped bulges in action space

145   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Victor P. Debattista
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We introduce the study of box/peanut (B/P) bulges in the action space of the initial axisymmetric system. We explore where populations with different actions end up once a bar forms and a B/P bulge develops. We find that the density bimodality due to the B/P bulge (the X-shape) is better traced by populations with low radial, JR,0, or vertical, Jz,0, actions, or high azimuthal action, J{phi},0. Generally populations separated by JR,0 have a greater variation in bar strength and vertical heating than those separated by Jz,0. While the bar substantially weakens the initial vertical gradient of Jz,0, it also drives a strikingly monotonic vertical profile of JR,0. We then use these results to guide us in assigning metallicity to star particles in a pure N-body model. Because stellar metallicity in unbarred galaxies depends on age as well as radial and vertical positions, the initial actions are particularly well suited for assigning metallicities. We argue that assigning metallicities based on single actions, or on positions, results in metallicity distributions inconsistent with those observed in real galaxies. We therefore use all three actions to assign metallicity to an N-body model by comparing with the actions of a star-forming, unbarred simulation. The resulting metallicity distribution is pinched on the vertical axis, has a realistic vertical gradient and has a stronger X-shape in metal-rich populations, as found in real galaxies.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We present a classification for bulges of a complete sample of ~1350 edge-on disk galaxies derived from the RC3 (Third Reference Catalogue of Bright Galaxies, de Vaucouleurs et al. 1991). A visual classification of the bulges using the Digitized Sky Survey (DSS) in three types of b/p bulges or as an elliptical type is presented and supported by CCD images. NIR observations reveal that dust extinction does almost not influence the shape of bulges. There is no substantial difference between the shape of bulges in the optical and in the NIR. Our analysis reveals that 45% of all bulges are box- and peanut-shaped (b/p). The frequency of b/p bulges for all morphological types from S0 to Sd is > 40%. In particular, this is for the first time that such a large frequency of b/p bulges is reported for galaxies as late as Sd. The fraction of the observed b/p bulges is large enough to explain the b/p bulges by bars.
We have observed 60 edge-on galaxies in the NIR in order to study the stellar distribution in galaxies with box/peanut-shaped bulges. The much smaller amount of dust extinction at these wavelengths allows us to identify in almost all target galaxies with box/peanut-shaped bulges an additional thin, central component in cuts parallel to the major axis. This structure can be identified with a bar. The length of this structure scaled by the length of the bulge correlates with the morphologically classified shape of the bulge. This newly established correlation is therefore mainly interpreted as the projection of the bar at different aspect angles. Galaxies with peanut bulges have a bar seen nearly edge-on and the ratio of bar length to thickness, 14 +/- 4, can be directly measured for the first time. In addition, the correlation of the boxiness of bulges with the bar strength indicates that the bar characteristic could partly explain differences in the bulge shape. Furthermore, a new size relation between the box/peanut structure and the central bulge is found. Our observations are discussed in comparison to a N-body simulation for barred galaxies (Pfenniger & Friedli 1991). We conclude that the inner region of barred disk galaxies are build up by three distinct components: the spheroidal bulge, a thin bar, and a b/p structure most likely representing the thick part of the bar.
108 - J. Mendez-Abreu 2010
We present high resolution absorption-line spectroscopy of 3 face-on galaxies, NGC 98, NGC 600, and NGC 1703 with the aim of searching for box/peanut (B/P)-shaped bulges. These observations test and confirm the prediction of Debattista et al. (2005) that face-on B/P-shaped bulges can be recognized by a double minimum in the profile of the fourth-order Gauss-Hermite moment h_4. In NGC 1703, which is an unbarred control galaxy, we found no evidence of a B/P bulge. In NGC 98, a clear double minimum in h_4 is present along the major axis of the bar and before the end of the bar, as predicted. In contrast, in NGC 600, which is also a barred galaxy but lacks a substantial bulge, we do not find a significant B/P shape.
From a sample of 84 local barred, moderately inclined disc galaxies, we determine the fraction which host boxy or peanut-shaped (B/P) bulges (the vertically thickened inner parts of bars). We find that the frequency of B/P bulges in barred galaxies i s a very strong function of stellar mass: 79% of the bars in galaxies with log (M_{star}/M_{sun}) >~ 10.4 have B/P bulges, while only 12% of those in lower-mass galaxies do. (We find a similar dependence in data published by Yoshino & Yamauchi 2015 for edge-on galaxies.) There are also strong trends with other galaxy parameters -- e.g., Hubble type: 77% of S0-Sbc bars, but only 15% of Sc-Sd bars, have B/P bulges -- but these appear to be side effects of the correlations of these parameters with stellar mass. In particular, despite indications from models that a high gas content can suppress bar buckling, we find no evidence that the (atomic) gas mass ratio M_{atomic}/M_{star} affects the presence of B/P bulges, once the stellar-mass dependence is controlled for. The semi-major axes of B/P bulges range from one-quarter to three-quarters of the full bar size, with a mean of R_{box}/L_{bar} = 0.42 +/- 0.09 and R_{box}/a_{max} = 0.53 +/- 0.12 (where R_{box} is the size of the B/P bulge and a_{max} and L_{bar} are lower and upper limits on the size of the bar).
83 - Junichi Baba NAOJ 2021
Some of barred galaxies, including the Milky Way, host a boxy/peanut/X-shaped bulge (BPX-shaped bulge). Previous studiessuggested that the BPX-shaped bulge can either be developed by bar buckling or by vertical inner Lindblad resonance (vILR)heating without buckling. In this paper, we study the observable consequence of an BPX-shaped bulge built up quickly after barformation via vILR heating without buckling, using anN-body/hydrodynamics simulation of an isolated Milky Way-like galaxy.We found that the BPX-shaped bulge is dominated by stars born prior to bar formation. This is because the bar suppresses starformation, except for the nuclear stellar disc (NSD) region and its tips. The stars formed near the bar ends have higher Jacobienergy, and when these stars lose their angular momentum, their radial action increases to conserve Jacobi energy. This preventsthem from reaching the vILR to be heated to the BPX region. By contrast, the NSD forms after the bar formation. From thissimulation and general considerations, we expect that the age distributions of the NSD and BPX-shaped bulge formed withoutbar buckling do not overlap each other. Then, the transition age between these components betrays the formation time of the bar, and is testable in future observations of the Milky Way and extra-galactic barred galaxies
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا